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Price: $26.95

Format:
Paperback 192 pp.
135 mm x 203 mm

ISBN-10:
0199601887

ISBN-13:
9780199601882

Publication date:
February 2012

Imprint: OUP UK

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Jeroboam's Royal Drama

Dr. Keith Bodner

Series : Biblical Refigurations

Among the most challenging biblical figures to understand is Jeroboam son of Nebat, the first monarch of northern Israel whose story is told in 1 Kings 11-14. This book explores the characterization of Jeroboam in the Hebrew text, and traces his rags to riches career trajectory. What are the circumstances whereby this widow's son is elevated to the position of king, with a conditional promise for a lasting dynasty? A close reading of the narrative reveals a literary achievement of great subtlety and complexity.

Even though he becomes the negative standard for the rest of Israel's royal history, Jeroboam's portrait is far more nuanced than is often realized and yields a host of surprises for the engaged reader. Numerous issues are raised in the 1 Kings 11-14 material, including questions of power, leadership, and the role of the prophetic office in national affairs. Against the grain of conventional interpretation that tends to idealize or vilify biblical characters, Keith Bodner's study locates the arrival of Jeroboam's kingship as a direct response to scandalous activity within the Solomonic empire.

Readership : Students and scholars of biblical studies; of the Hebrew bible; of the reception history of the bible; of literary theory.

Prologue: Jeroboam and the Legitimacy of Rebellion
1. Ideologies of Kingship: Mechanisms of Power and the Reigns of Saul, David, and Solomon
2. Souls of Revolt: Solomon's Adversaries and the Flashback to Jeroboam
3. Politics of Rebellion: The Schism of Shechem and the Resistance to Imperialism
4. Objects of Control: Golden Calves 2.0 and the Distribution of Power
5. Play-Within-A-Play: The Altar and the Allegory of 1 Kings 13
6. Focus on the Family: The Royal Disguise of Israel's Queen
Epilogue: The Future of Jeroboam's Memory

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Dr. Keith Bodner is Professor of Religious Studies at Crandall Univresity in New Brunswick.

Making Sense - Margot Northey and Joan McKibbin
Leviticus as Literature - The late Mary Douglas
Augustine - Carol Harrison

Special Features

  • Uses narrative criticism to engage the biblical text.
  • Pays particular attention to the literary characterization of Jeroboam.
  • Provides a close reading the text of 1 Kings 11-14.