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A Distraught Prophet and Other Performance Readings in Jeremiah

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Billingham presents a performance reading of nine further scenes from Jeremiah chs. 20-32. In a synchronic reading, she undertakes rhetorical analyses of her own translations of the Masoretic Text, noting repetitions, chiastic structures, parallelism, alliteration and assonance that add impact to the messages. She analyses each scene according to their actors, audience, settings (geographical and socio-political), and improvisation of traditional scripts.

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SKU: 978-1-914490-42-2

Continuing the theme of Valerie M Billingham’s, The Great Drama of Jeremiah: A Performance Reading which addresses eleven scenes in Jer 1-19, Billingham presents a performance reading of nine further scenes from chs. 20-32. In a synchronic reading, she undertakes rhetorical analyses of her own translations of the Masoretic Text, noting repetitions, chiastic structures, parallelism, alliteration and assonance that add impact to the messages. She analyses each scene according to their actors, audience, settings (geographical and socio-political), and improvisation of traditional scripts.

Employing the Earth Bible Team’s six Eco-justice Principles, she attends to the voices of Earth and members of the Earth community as they express their distress at the Babylonian invasion of Judah, and rejoice at the prospect of the exiles’ return. With the exilic community suffering Post Traumatic Stress, she argues that Jeremiah presents a manual that offers healing and restoration. Acknowledging performance as a worthy pursuit, Billingham provides helpful groundwork for engaging with texts in order to produce scripts for acting.

The performances presented include Jeremiah’s distress at Yhwh’s apparent deception and coercion regarding his prophetic vocation. The kings are the problem in Judah, provoking Yhwh’s judgment, but plans to appoint an ideal leader who will rule according to the covenantal qualities of wisdom, justice and righteousness. Two baskets of figs represent the exilic community and those who remain in Judah. In a twist, the good figs are identified as the suffering exiles, and the bad figs are those who avoided deportation. In a heated clash over the severity and duration of exile, yokes are smashed and Jeremiah is declared to be the true prophet of Yhwh. Jeremiah purchases his uncle’s block of land. An ecological reading presents the field as a silent symbol of hope for the exilic community. It represents all the other fields that will be restored to the rightful families of the returning exiles.

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Table of Contents

A Performance Reading of Jeremiah

Prophecy as Performance in the Oral World of the Hebrew Bible
A Synchronic Reading
Rhetorical Criticism
Jeremiah’s Ecological Perspective
A Performance Reading of Jeremiah

Let the Show Begin!

Performance 1:
A Prophetic Meltdown (20:1-18)
Scene 1: The Priest Punishes the Prophet
Scene 2: The Sign-Act of the Priest’s Name Change
Scene 3: Prophet Abuse: Yhwh Oppresses Jeremiah
Scene 4: A Hymn of Praise to Yhwh
Scene 5: A Prophetic Meltdown

Performance 2:
Treasonous Talk: Yhwh is Judah’s Enemy (21:1-14)
Scene 1: Yhwh’s Help? Forget it
Scene 2: Life in Babylon or Death in Judah? It’s their Choice
Scene 3: Judge Justly or be Judged

Performance 3:
The Kings are the Problem in Judah (22:1-30)
Scene 1: Hey Kings! Rule with Justice and Righteousness, and Avert Destruction
Scene 2: Exile is Worse than Death
Scene 3: Luxurious Houses
Scene 4: Dumped like a Dead Donkey
Scene 5: Yhwh Rejects the Monarchy

Performance 4:
The Kings are Hopeless and the Prophets are Liars, but God has a Plan (23:1-40)
Scene 1: Good and Bad Shepherds
Scene 2: Lying Prophets
Scene 3: Yhwh’s Oracle/Burden

Performance 5:
Good Figs, Bad Figs: Which Fig are You? (24:1-10)
Scene 1: Two Baskets of Figs Act as Symbols
Performance 6:
Drink Up Ye Hearties, Judgment is Here (25:1-38)
Scene 1: Seventy Years of Exile
Scene 2: Drink the Cup of Yhwh’s Wrath
Scene 3: Howl, Cry and Wail, you Kings

Performance 7:
Guilty as Charged:
The Death Penalty for Jeremiah (26:1-24)
Scene 1: Change your Ways or Else
Scene 2: Jeremiah versus the Religious Leaders
Scene 3: Legal Precedents

Performance 8:
A Prophetic Showdown (27:1–28:17)
Scene 1: Bonds and Yokes: Symbols of Political Domination
Scene 2: Yhwh Allocates Lands
Scene 3: To Submit or to Resist? That is the Question
Scene 4: Serve Babylon and Live
Scene 5: The Return of the Temple Vessels
Scene 6: The Clash of the Prophets

Performance 9:
One Solitary Field: Hope for Judah (32:1-44)
Scene 1: Zedekiah will be exiled to Babylon
Scene 2: Hey Jeremiah, Buy this Field!
Scene 3: The Real Estate Deal
Scene 4: Why Now? Jeremiah is Perplexed about the Timing of the Land Sale
Scene 5: The Sins of Israel and Judah Provoke Yhwh
Scene 6: Yhwh’s People Planted in This Land
Scene 7: The Field of Hope

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Book information

Author
Valerie M Billingham
List Price
£70 / $85 / €75
Series
Hebrew Bible Monographs, 109
Scholars' Price
£35 / $42.50 / €37.50
ISBN 13 hardback
978-1-914490-42-2
Format
Hardback
Page Extent
xii + 270
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