What is it about?
Intertextuality is a theory that asserts that language and texts are connected through a web of interconnections, connected through the past, present, spoken, and written. Hermeneutic Phenomenology is a discipline that explains the phenomenon of interpretation and the human experience. In this article I combine these theories in order to bring clarity to New Testament interpretation. Ultimately, it offers interpreters guidelines for using intertextuality and explains how intertextuality is used in interpretation.
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Why is it important?
This article is important because it clarifies areas of intertextuality that have been misrepresented in Biblical Studies, and it offers interpreters guidelines for future research.
Read the Original
This page is a summary of: Intertextuality and Hermeneutic Phenomenology: Finding Hermeneutical Clarity in the Diversity of New Testament Scholarship, Horizons in Biblical Theology, July 2022, Brill,
DOI: 10.1163/18712207-12341454.
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