TY - JOUR
T1 - Tobit and the Genesis Apocryphon: Toward a Family Portrait
T2 - Toward a family portrait
AU - Perrin, Andrew
AU - Machiela, Daniel A.
PY - 2014
Y1 - 2014
N2 - The Aramaic Dead Sea Scrolls provide a unique window into Second Temple Jewish literature and scriptural interpretation that is only beginning to gain sustained scholarly attention. A major question regarding these texts, and addressed preliminarily in this essay, is the extent to which they may constitute a coherent corpus of related works. Tobit and the Genesis Apocryphon are two Aramaic compositions that have benefited from extensive individual analysis but have not been studied alongside each other. A close, comparative reading of both texts reveals a surprising correspondence in their topics of interest, scriptural source material, literary techniques, narrative structures, and idiom. These similarities suggest a close family resemblance between Tobit and the Apocryphon, which were likely written in the same or associated scribal circles during the early Hellenistic period. The relationship between these two texts makes a case for similar comparisons of other Aramaic scrolls and suggests a more tightly formed constellation of affiliated texts than has been previously recognized.
AB - The Aramaic Dead Sea Scrolls provide a unique window into Second Temple Jewish literature and scriptural interpretation that is only beginning to gain sustained scholarly attention. A major question regarding these texts, and addressed preliminarily in this essay, is the extent to which they may constitute a coherent corpus of related works. Tobit and the Genesis Apocryphon are two Aramaic compositions that have benefited from extensive individual analysis but have not been studied alongside each other. A close, comparative reading of both texts reveals a surprising correspondence in their topics of interest, scriptural source material, literary techniques, narrative structures, and idiom. These similarities suggest a close family resemblance between Tobit and the Apocryphon, which were likely written in the same or associated scribal circles during the early Hellenistic period. The relationship between these two texts makes a case for similar comparisons of other Aramaic scrolls and suggests a more tightly formed constellation of affiliated texts than has been previously recognized.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84898716770&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1353/jbl.2014.0003
DO - 10.1353/jbl.2014.0003
M3 - Journal Article
AN - SCOPUS:84898716770
SN - 0021-9231
VL - 133
SP - 111
EP - 132
JO - Journal of Biblical Literature
JF - Journal of Biblical Literature
IS - 1
ER -