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Semeia 69-70: Intertextuality and the Bible is unavailable, but you can change that!

Semeia is an experimental journal devoted to the exploration of new and emergent areas and methods of biblical criticism. Studies employing the methods, models, and findings of linguistics, folklore studies, contemporary literary criticism, structuralism, social anthropology, and other such disciplines and approaches, are invited. Although experimental in both form and content, Semeia proposes to...

has important ramifications for contemporary readers of the Gospel concerned about the ethics of reading a violent biblical text which portrays Jews as “hypocrites,” as “killers of children”—especially so in this the fiftieth anniversary of the liberation of the child-death camps in Nazi Germany. Do we accept or reject the narrative roles established for us as readers? What are our responsibilities to the text as critics? And what will be our obligation to those who are portrayed in biblical texts
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