Doren G. Snoek evaluates social and cultural memory in biblical research and offers a new approach to Chronicles, a book often considered derivative of its sources. The author argues that it is a robust, independent story of ancient Israel and Judah.
Doren G. Snoek translates current theory in memory studies to textual production in antiquity. Focusing on textual and material scribal processes that contribute to the formation of historical knowledge, especially for the biblical book Chronicles, he describes how scribes respond to social conditions and existing texts as they generate new "media offers," that is, new scrolls and the new narratives they contain. He argues that Chronicles creates new social, political, and religious possibilities and, in some cases, may have caused the loss of historical knowledge. The study contributes to scholarship by characterizing Chronicles as a literarily autonomous and materially independent national history for Yehud.
Doren G. Snoek
Born 1986; 2007 BA in Philosophy and Religion; 2014 MDiv; 2015 ThM; 2017 MA in Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations; 2022 PhD in Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations, University of Chicago; Associate Lecturer in Hebrew Bible / Old Testament, University of St Andrews.
Genealogy History Literary Theory Second Temple period