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Isaiah contains a rich variety of enemy images from a time span covering at least four centuries. Eidevall's textual analysis in Prophecy and Propaganda focuses on the characterization of the enemy, the rhetorical strategy adopted, the text's function in its historical context(s), and the ideology of the author(s) and/or editor(s). The main part of the study begins with textual analyses of passages dealing with the hostile empires of Assyria, Babylon, and Egypt. It then turns to Judah's northern neighbors, Ephraim/Israel and Aram, formed another hostile alliance against Judah, and how oracles directed against Samaria took on new significance in the postexilic era, due to the emerging schism between Samaritans and other Jews. The portrait of Moab is intriguingly ambiguous, but the picture of Edom is uncompromisingly negative. Finally, the study investigates anonymous enemies of various kinds, who are often characterized as rebels deserving severe punishment. The final editors of Isaiah wanted to discourage a wide range of actions and attitudes that, according to their standards, amounted to opposition to YHWH by YHWH worshipers themselves.Ideological language, such as the Zion-centered perspective and the legendary version of the events in 701 BCE, is paradigmatic in Isaiah, raising the question to what extent the prophecies therein can be understood as instances of contextually determined (and continually reworked and reinterpreted) political propaganda. The final editors belonged to a party supporting the religious politics of Ezra and Nehemiah. Although they describe themselves as humble servants and as marginalized victims of persecution, it is likely that they actually represented circles with access to the power structures of their time.A must-read for anyone studying perspectives on Isaiah in scholarly research today.
Contents
I. Introduction1. Outlining the task: Backgrounds and goals1.1. On enemy images1.2. Enemy images in texts from the Ancient Near East1.3. Enemy images and biblical exegesis: Perspectives on previous research1.4. On the book of Isaiah as object of the investigation1.5. Problems, goals, and methodsII. Investigation2. Images of empires2.1. Isa 5:26-30: A prologue to the discourse on empires2.2. Images of Assyria2.3. Images of Egypt and Cush2.4. Images of Babylon2.5. Empire portraits: comparisons and conclusions3. Images of neighbouring nations3.1. Images of Ephraim/Israel and Aram3.2. Images of Edom3.3. Images of other neighbouring nations3.4. Neighbouring nations: comparisons and conclusions4. Anonymous enemies4.1. Rebels and stubble: Characterization of anonymous enemies4.2. Key passages4.3. Links to images of nations and empires4.4. Named and unnamed enemies in a macrostructural perspectiveIII. Discussion5. The enemies and YHWH5.1. Enemies of YHWH5.2. Enemies as instruments in YHWH's service5.3. YHWH as enemy5.4. YHWH as the enemy's enemy6. Enemy images, ideology, and identity6.1. The Zion-centered perspective and the 701 paradigm6.2. Prophecies as political propaganda6.3. On enemy images and implied self-images7. SummaryBibliography