
| | | 
| | Buy this book together with Neo-Aramaic Dialect Studies by Geoffrey Khan |  | + |  | Save $31.95 Total List Price: $213.00 Buy both books for only $181.05
|
| | | | 
Customers who bought this book also bought: | The Life of Severus by Zachariah of Mytilene by Lena Ambjörn This biography ofSeverus, the patriarch of Antioch 512-518 AD, gives unique information about life in Mediterranean region in the second half of the 5th century. It is an important source for studies on Late Antiquity and the early History of Christianity. |
|  | Syriac and Antiochian Exegesis and Biblical Theology for the 3rd Millennium by Robert D. Miller This volume of collected essays explores the exegesis of the patristic School of Antioch, the Syriac Church Fathers, and the churches of the Antiochian-Syriac traditions. This exegetical tradition can be of use in today's historical-critical biblical scholarship with relation to theology. |
|  | Textual Variation: Theological and Social Tendencies? by H. A. G. Houghton Did scribes change the text of the New Testament? This book questions the assumption that they did and the claim that variant readings are due to theological motivation or social difference. |
|  | The New Syriac Primer by George Anton Kiraz A truly useful introduction to the Syriac language is a rare find. This practical initiation to the study of the ancient language of the Christian church speaks with clarity and authority. A fruitful integration of scholarly introduction and practical application, this primer is more than a simple grammar or syntactic introduction to the language. Written in a style designed for beginners, Kiraz avoids technical language and strives for a reader-friendly inductive approach. Readings from actual Syriac texts allow the student to experience the language first hand and the basics of the grammar of the language are ably explained. The book comes with a handy CD so that readers may listen to all reading sentences and text passages in the book. |
|  | The Rites of Eastern Christendom by Archdale King In this classic introduction to Eastern Orthodox liturgies, King examines the liturgies of nine Oriental churches. The Syrian, Maronite, Syro-Malankara, Coptic, Ethiopic, Byzantine, Chaldean, Armenian, and Syro-Malabar rites are all considered. Each is described and given a context in the setting of its native church. |
|
| |
| previous | up | next |
Rees, Margo. Lishan Didan, Targum Didan
E-mail this product to a friend
| Title: | Lishan Didan, Targum Didan | | Subtitle: | Translation Language in a Neo-Aramaic Targum Tradition | | Series: | Gorgias Neo-Aramaic Studies 3 | | Availability: | In Print | | By Margo Rees | | ISBN: | 978-1-59333-426-0 | | Publication Date: | 5/2008 | | Language: | English | | Format: | Hardback, Black, 6 x 9 in | | Publisher: | Gorgias Press LLC |
This study examines the language and translation technique used in a modern “targum” (interpretive translation) of the Bible. The targum – referred to as “Manuscript Barzani” (msB) – is a written preservation of a tradition of Jewish Neo-Aramaic Bible translation, originally transmitted in oral form among the religious leaders of a community in Iraqi Kurdistan. It represents a literary form of the Neo-Aramaic spoken by the Jews of the Rewanduz/Arbel region. Within their community, the targum was used in the schools to teach the language and text of the Hebrew Bible to the young men. This translation has parallels in the translation traditions and cultural contexts of other Jewish language communities. The translation technique used in all of these communities likewise demonstrates a continuity with Targum Onqelos and Jonathan. Part I is a description of the morphology of the literary language in which the text is written. Part II consists of an analysis of the translation technique used throughout msB, with reference to previous scholarship on ancient versions. In part III, the place of this specific translation language is considered within the larger context of Jewish languages, communities and Bible translations. The text of msB is compared directly with other Bible translations from within the Neo-Aramaic traditions, as well as from other Jewish language traditions. The role of translation in the history of Jewish education is also examined as a means of determining the relationship between form and function in this particular style of traditional Bible translation.
Margo Rees received her Master of Divinity from Union Theological Seminary-PSCE (Richmond) in 2002. She continued her research in Hebrew and Aramaic at the Faculty of Oriental Studies, University of Cambridge, where she received her PhD in 2006. She works with modern as well as classical Semitic languages and Bible translations, studying the history of biblical translation in Judaism. | |
| | Rees, Margo. Lishan Didan, Targum Didan | | ISBN: | 978-1-59333-426-0 | | Weight: | 1 LBS. | | Price: | $98.00 | | To get the 30% Gorgias BiblioPerks™ discount, simply login. | |
|
|