CONFUSED LANGUAGE AS A DELIBERATE LITERARY DEVICE IN BIBLICAL HEBREW NARRATIVE

Confused Language as a Deliberate Literary Device in Biblical Hebrew Narrative

Confused Language as a Deliberate Literary Device in Biblical Hebrew Narrative

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This article presents a paradigm example of confused language in an ancient Near Eastern literary text, the Egyptian tale Dabs of "The Shipwrecked Sailor." It explains the pertinent passage as a clever literary device in which confused and irregular syntax is utilized to portray the confusion that characterized the moment of the shipwreck.It then pretend play proceeds to treat seven biblical passages where similarly confused language is invoked to portray confusion, excitement, or bewilderment.Two of these passages have been treated previously in the secondary literature: 1 Sam 9:12-13 and Ruth 2:7.The five new treatments concern Gen 37:28, Gen 37:30, Judg 18:14-20, 1 Sam 14:21, and 1 Sam 17:38.

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