Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/58390
Title: Reception history, biblical studies and the issue of multivalency
Authors: Gillingham, Susan E.
Keywords: Bible -- Criticism, interpretation, etc.
Bible -- Theology
Covenant theology -- Biblical teaching
Bible. Psalms -- Criticism, interpretation, etc.
Issue Date: 2018
Publisher: University of Malta. Faculty of Theology
Citation: Gillingham, S. E. (2018). Reception history, biblical studies and the issue of multivalency. Melita Theologica, 68(1), 1-15.
Abstract: “Reception History” is a relatively new method in biblical studies, although author argues that people have been doing this, without giving it this name, for centuries. Basically it is an approach which is interested in the “afterlife” of a biblical text, discovering a plethora of readings by looking at the use of a text not only through the more traditional commentary and later translations, but also through its various representations in liturgy, music, art, poetry, drama and film. Given that the use of biblical texts in liturgy was beginning to develop at the same time as the different canons of Scripture were being formed, liturgical reception history is a very ancient phenomenon. Similarly, given that biblical texts - especially the Gospels and Psalter - were illuminated in manuscripts well over a millennium ago, art reception history as visual exegesis has some very early antecedents.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/58390
ISSN: 10129588
Appears in Collections:MT - Volume 68, Issue 1 - 2018
MT - Volume 68, Issue 1 - 2018

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