Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 140
Trim: 6½ x 9½
978-0-8476-9197-5 • Hardback • January 1999 • $96.00 • (£74.00)
978-0-8476-9198-2 • Paperback • January 1999 • $26.95 • (£19.99)
978-0-585-16584-4 • eBook • January 2000 • $25.50 • (£19.99)
Chapter 1 What Is Folklore?
Chapter 2 Written Folklore
Chapter 3 Previous Studies of Folklore and the Bible
Chapter 4 The Bible as Folklore: Variation in Number, Name and Sequence
Chapter 5 Variation in Number
Chapter 6 Variation in Name
Chapter 7 Variation in Sequence
Chapter 8 More Duplicate Texts
Chapter 9 The Ten Commandments
Chapter 10 The Lord's Prayer
Chapter 11 Still More Duplicate Texts
Chapter 12 Conclusion
Chapter 13 Bibliography
Chapter 14 Index
The idea that the Bible contains elements of folklore is not new. What makes Alan Dundes's latest book so remarkable, however, is his claim that the Bible is more folklore than anything else. Even more remarkable is the fact that after reading this book,such a claim seems absolutely convincing. This is an outstanding book that belongs on the shelf of anyone concerned either with folklore or the Bible.
— Michael P. Carroll, University of Western Ontario
It has long been recognized by professional biblicists that the Bible is full of duplications and that the Bible originally circulated orally. Folklorist Alan Dundes' original contribution, carried out with the spriteliness and verve for which he is celebrated, is to show how the duplications are not contingent but inherent in the nature of folklore, and thereby to show how the folkloristic nature of the Bible continues in even its written form. A wonderful book.
— Robert Segal, Lancaster University
Holy Writ as Oral Lit offers insight into the Bible without diminishing it.
— Columbus Dispatch
'Holy writ as Oral Lit,' a brief but illuminating excursus into the Bible.
— Johnathan Kirsch; Los Angeles Times, March 99
The fact of variation in the Bible is an important point, which Dundes documents abundantly. . . Dundes's emphasis on folklore analysis for understanding the biblical writings is salutary.
— Ronald S. Hendel, University of California, Berkeley; Religious Studies Review
In the most recent of Dundes's three important contributions to the study of religion. It is our good fortune that this most eminent of American anthropologists and folklorists well known for his work on folklore theory and on subjects as diverse as German national charachter and American joke cycles, has now brought his scholarship to bear on religion. Dundes's work is already widely influential in the United States and deserves to be better known among British scholars of religion.
— Journal of Contemporary Religion
This study provides an explanation for several of the discrepancies found in the Bible. It also gives the reader insight into the method used in this kind of study.
— The Bible Today
Dundes persuasively makes his case for the folkloristic origins of biblical literature.
— Western Folklore
The Holy Writ as Oral Lit is a very worthwhile book. It is enlightening, convincing, entertaining, and familiarizes the reader with the most important research done on Scripture and folklore.
— Evangelical Review Of Theology
A worthwhile book. It is enlightening, convincing, entertaining, and familiarizes the reader with the most important research on Scripture and folklore. In addition, it gives the reader a bird's-eye view of the nature and genres of folklore.
— Auss
While written for the novice studying the orally discursive nature of the Judeo-Christian canon, the book will also be useful to more advanced scholars, especially for its survey of the literature and comprehensive biography.
— Christianity and Literature