Introduction
Chapter 1: Why Comparative and Why Now: A Review from the Field, Amy L. Balogh and Tammi J. Schneider
Chapter 2: “For Zion’s sake I will not keep silent!”: An Analysis of Isaiah 62 with Poetic Aurality and Tri-Polar Comparative Approaches, Johanna Rönnlund and Beth E. Elness-Hanson
Chapter 3: A Comparative Approach to the Concept of Nakedness in the Garden of Eden Narratives of the Hebrew Bible and the Qur’an, Rebekah Call
Chapter 4: When Prophets and Poets Clash in the Courts of Kings: A Comparative Analysis of the Elijah Narrative and the Old Norse Egil’s Saga, Tod R. Harris
Chapter 5: Comparing Referential and Discursive Dimensions of Texts, Edwin K. Broadhead
Chapter 6: Reimagining Grief: A Comparative Analysis of Grief and Its Social Function in Paul and Epictetus, Melissa J. Barciela Mandala
Chapter 7: How to Do Things with Prophecy: J. L. Austin’s How to Do Things with Words and the Book of Jonah, Kelsey Spinnato
Chapter 8: Wait, Did Paul Know Homer? A Reflection on Reflecting on Paul’s Reflections, Dan Clanton Jr.
Chapter 9: A Method in the Study of Literary Motifs: How Folkloric Studies Can Inform Comparative Methodologies, Alison K. Hawanchak
Chapter 10: Does My Story Count?: The Bible and #MeToo, Leah Cech
Chapter 11: Exploring the State and Future of Comparison in Biblical Studies: A Response, Drew S. Holland