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In this paper, I explore Old Testament stories of exile from an anthropological perspective. The aim is to investigate the notion of the human, and the human condition, as it appears in some of the oldest biblical texts. More specifically, I focus on three exile stories: “The Fall” (Genesis 3), “Ca...

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Main Author: Mattias Viktorin
Format: Article
Language:Danish
Published: Lärdomshistoriska samfundet 2018-01-01
Series:Lychnos
Subjects:
Online Access:https://tidskriftenlychnos.se/article/view/20440
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author Mattias Viktorin
author_facet Mattias Viktorin
author_sort Mattias Viktorin
collection DOAJ
description In this paper, I explore Old Testament stories of exile from an anthropological perspective. The aim is to investigate the notion of the human, and the human condition, as it appears in some of the oldest biblical texts. More specifically, I focus on three exile stories: “The Fall” (Genesis 3), “Cain and Abel” (Genesis 4), and “The Tower of Babel” (Genesis 11). I interpret these narratives as successive parts of the gradual emergence of humanity in biblical myth. First, when Adam and Eve tasted the “forbidden fruit,” they did not merely commit a crime; they also became autonomous in relation to the divine realm, which brought about the completion of humanity. Next, the story of Cain, and how he murdered his brother Abel, could arguably be interpreted as an etiological narrative about morality and the emergence of human civilization. The Babel story, finally, could be read as a dramatization of how language became a distinctively human trait, and how this facilitated new modes of literary expression and reflexive thought. Through my reading of these stories, I ultimately hope to show how they could be understood as constitutive parts of the anthropology of the Old Testament.
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spelling doaj.art-a0fe9927e2f04c8da65ad1e1468bd0602023-06-30T19:33:58ZdanLärdomshistoriska samfundetLychnos0076-16482004-48522018-01-01Den förvisade människanMattias Viktorin0Uppsala universitet In this paper, I explore Old Testament stories of exile from an anthropological perspective. The aim is to investigate the notion of the human, and the human condition, as it appears in some of the oldest biblical texts. More specifically, I focus on three exile stories: “The Fall” (Genesis 3), “Cain and Abel” (Genesis 4), and “The Tower of Babel” (Genesis 11). I interpret these narratives as successive parts of the gradual emergence of humanity in biblical myth. First, when Adam and Eve tasted the “forbidden fruit,” they did not merely commit a crime; they also became autonomous in relation to the divine realm, which brought about the completion of humanity. Next, the story of Cain, and how he murdered his brother Abel, could arguably be interpreted as an etiological narrative about morality and the emergence of human civilization. The Babel story, finally, could be read as a dramatization of how language became a distinctively human trait, and how this facilitated new modes of literary expression and reflexive thought. Through my reading of these stories, I ultimately hope to show how they could be understood as constitutive parts of the anthropology of the Old Testament. https://tidskriftenlychnos.se/article/view/20440exileanthropologythe old testamentlanguagemorality
spellingShingle Mattias Viktorin
Den förvisade människan
Lychnos
exile
anthropology
the old testament
language
morality
title Den förvisade människan
title_full Den förvisade människan
title_fullStr Den förvisade människan
title_full_unstemmed Den förvisade människan
title_short Den förvisade människan
title_sort den forvisade manniskan
topic exile
anthropology
the old testament
language
morality
url https://tidskriftenlychnos.se/article/view/20440
work_keys_str_mv AT mattiasviktorin denforvisademanniskan