Existing legal relationships can determine the historical or the fictive setting of a drama or a plot, narratives can propagate, expose the problems of, denounce or try to correct legal norms. The authors of the articles in this volume examine these relationships using examples of literary and functional texts from the Bible, the Ancient Near East, Early Judaism and from Classical Antiquity.
Law is not only conveyed in codified clauses; it is often featured as a pivotal topic in literary texts. Existing legal relationships can determine the historical or the fictive setting of a drama or a plot, narratives can propagate laws or demonstrate their inherent problems. Literature can be used as an integral part of a strategy to implement legally justified demands, it can aim at correcting or even at denouncing legal rules. The authors of this volume examine literary and functional texts from the bible, the Ancient Near East, early Judaism and classical antiquity. They choose from the fields of constitutional law, litigation, family law, property and inheritance law, damages, punishment, privilege and maintenance.
Friedrich Avemarie
Law Narrative Bible Ancient Near East Ancient Judaism Classics