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Journal ArticleDOI

The Literary Unity of Luke-Acts: Questions of Style – a Task for Literary Critics

J. Dawsey
- 01 Jan 1989 - 
- Vol. 35, Iss: 01, pp 48-66
TLDR
T Tyson's The Death of Jesus in Luke-Acts and Robert Tannehill's The Narrative Unity of Luke-acts, published in 1986, are good examples of the interpretive wealth being mined by scholars who are adopting literary-critical methods for approaching the Lukan writings as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract
Joseph Tyson's The Death of Jesus in Luke-Acts and Robert Tannehill's The Narrative Unity of Luke-Acts, published in 1986, are good examples of the interpretive wealth being mined by scholars who are adopting literary-critical methods for approaching the Lukan writings. What most distinguishes these critics' approaches from older, more familiar ones is the claim that the Bible's historical narratives are imaginative re-enactments of history – thus, in form, more akin to fiction than to theology, biography, or history. Robert Alter called the Biblical stories ‘historicized fiction’, meaning in our case that the author of Luke and Acts employed the artifices of fiction-writing, among others, supplying feeling and motives and creating speeches and dialogue for his characters. Professors Tyson and Tannehill, and other literary scholars like them, are helping us better discern how these techniques were used in Luke and Acts, thus opening new windows to the characters, the way that the author ascribes intentions to them, the plot, themes, nuances, points of view, uses of irony, and word-plays and associations in the writings.

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MonographDOI

The First Christian Historian. Writing the "Acts of the Apostles"

TL;DR: In this paper, the author of the Acts is compared to the first historian of Christianity, who is often accused of being a biased, imprecise, and anti-Jewish historian who created a distorted portrait of Paul.
Book

Pauline Christianity: Luke-Acts and the Legacy of Paul

TL;DR: In this paper, the reception of the Acts of the Apostles and the 'Pauline' Luke by Irenaeus is addressed, and the compositional intentions of the author of Luke-Acts in constructing "Pauline" Christianity are analyzed.
Book

The Assumed Authorial Unity of Luke and Acts: A Reassessment of the Evidence

TL;DR: 1. Background and methodology, authorial criteria: Greek prose compositional conventions, and final considerations and future directions.
Dissertation

Salvation in Luke: the impact of allusions to the cult on his soteriology

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine possible allusions to the cult in Luke and indicate their potential impact on his soteriology, showing that the healing ministry of Jesus in Luke was fulfilling the purpose of the Temple cult, and that Jesus applied to himself the exemption from sabbath-day rest granted to the Temple priests.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Unity of Luke—Acts: A Four-Bolted Hermeneutical Hinge

TL;DR: The call to dissolve the unity of Luke and Acts is a hermeneutical hinge and the answer to the question has wide-ranging interpretive implications as discussed by the authors, and questions about unity have led to new avenues of exploration and the identification of trajectories that crisscross both volumes and tie them together.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Art of Biblical Narrative

TL;DR: In this article, a literary approach to the Bible is presented, with a focus on the beginning of Prose Fiction and the use of the Bible as a starting point for literature.
Book

The Art of Biblical Narrative

Robert Alter
TL;DR: In this paper, a literary approach to the Bible is presented, with a focus on the beginning of Prose Fiction and the use of the Bible as a starting point for literature.