Publication
Imprint: Oxford ; New York, NY : Oxford University Press, [2015]. Responsibility: Robert C. Gregg. OCLC Number: 940936041. Physical: xviii, 721 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm. Features: Includes bibliographic references and indexes.
Call number
CR / Gregg
ISBN
9780190231491
Collections
CSS Library Notes
Named Work: Bible : Quaran :
Description: "Judaism, Christianity, and Islam are considered kindred religions--holding ancestral heritages and monotheistic belief in common--but there are definitive distinctions between these 'Abrahamic' peoples. Shared Stores, Rival Tellings explores the early exchanges of Jews, Christians, and Muslims, and argues that their interactions were dominated by debates over the meanings of certain stories sacred to all three communities" -- from jacket flap
Table of Contents:
Part I. Cain and Abel/Qabil and Habil. Preview, chapters 1-3: the first murder --
Cain's fratricide: rabbis and other early Jewish writers judge the case --
Cain and Abel christianized --
"Tell them the story of the two sons of Adam as it really was" --
Comparative summary: Cain and Abel/Qabil and Habil --
part II. Sarah and Hagar: mothers to three families. Preview, chapters 4-6: Abraham's rival wives --
Sarah and Hagar: Jewish portrayals --
Sarah and Hagar in Christian retellings --
Hagar and Ishmael, Abraham's family in Mecca --
Comparative summary: Sarah and Hagar: mothers to three families --
part III. Joseph's temptation by his Egyptian master's wife. Preview, chapters 7-9: Joseph/Yusuf and the temptress --
Joseph and Potiphar's wife: Jewish interpretations --
Joseph put to the test: Christian sermons and art --
Yusuf with Zulaykha --
Comparative summary: Joseph's temptation by his Egyptian master's wife --
part IV. Jonah the angry prophet. Preview, chapters 10-12: "The one of the fish" --
Jonah, Nineveh, the great fish, and God: Jews ponder the story --
Jonah and Jesus: in one story, two --
Islam's Yunus: from anger to praise --
Comparative summary: Jonah the angry prophet --
part V. Mary, Miriam, Maryam. Preview, chapters 13-15: Mary through the eyes of three religions --
Mary in Christian imagination: from Jewish maiden to ever-virgin to heavenly advocate --
Miriam, mother of Yeshu the false messiah: Jewish counterstories --
Maryam, mother of `Isa: "chosen ... over the women of all peoples" --
Comparative summary: Mary, Miriam, Maryam --
Epilogue.
FY2017 /
Description: "Judaism, Christianity, and Islam are considered kindred religions--holding ancestral heritages and monotheistic belief in common--but there are definitive distinctions between these 'Abrahamic' peoples. Shared Stores, Rival Tellings explores the early exchanges of Jews, Christians, and Muslims, and argues that their interactions were dominated by debates over the meanings of certain stories sacred to all three communities" -- from jacket flap
Table of Contents:
Part I. Cain and Abel/Qabil and Habil. Preview, chapters 1-3: the first murder --
Cain's fratricide: rabbis and other early Jewish writers judge the case --
Cain and Abel christianized --
"Tell them the story of the two sons of Adam as it really was" --
Comparative summary: Cain and Abel/Qabil and Habil --
part II. Sarah and Hagar: mothers to three families. Preview, chapters 4-6: Abraham's rival wives --
Sarah and Hagar: Jewish portrayals --
Sarah and Hagar in Christian retellings --
Hagar and Ishmael, Abraham's family in Mecca --
Comparative summary: Sarah and Hagar: mothers to three families --
part III. Joseph's temptation by his Egyptian master's wife. Preview, chapters 7-9: Joseph/Yusuf and the temptress --
Joseph and Potiphar's wife: Jewish interpretations --
Joseph put to the test: Christian sermons and art --
Yusuf with Zulaykha --
Comparative summary: Joseph's temptation by his Egyptian master's wife --
part IV. Jonah the angry prophet. Preview, chapters 10-12: "The one of the fish" --
Jonah, Nineveh, the great fish, and God: Jews ponder the story --
Jonah and Jesus: in one story, two --
Islam's Yunus: from anger to praise --
Comparative summary: Jonah the angry prophet --
part V. Mary, Miriam, Maryam. Preview, chapters 13-15: Mary through the eyes of three religions --
Mary in Christian imagination: from Jewish maiden to ever-virgin to heavenly advocate --
Miriam, mother of Yeshu the false messiah: Jewish counterstories --
Maryam, mother of `Isa: "chosen ... over the women of all peoples" --
Comparative summary: Mary, Miriam, Maryam --
Epilogue.
FY2017 /
Physical description
xviii, 721 p.; 25 cm
Description
The phrase 'Abrahamic Religions' points to commonalities between Jews, Christians, and Muslims, but downplays critical differences between the three communities' systems of belief and practice. Commonalities involve being book centred, and having in their cherished writings - the two Bibles and the Qur'an - revelations attributed to one God, not many. Twenty-seven narratives are, though not strictly identical in form and content, sacred to the three religions.
Language
Original language
English