Old Testament Essays (May 2021)

Local Incoherence, Global Coherence? Allusion and the Readability of Ancient Israelite Literature

  • Michael A Lyons

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 34, no. 1

Abstract

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Does a lack of coherence always render a text “unreadable” or “unintelligible”? In this essay, I explore the relationships between three of De Beaugrande and Dressler’s standards of textuality: cohesion, coherence, and intertextuality (considered more narrowly here in the form of allusion). I consider examples of textual allusion that readers have considered surprising, incongruous, or incoherent. I conclude that in some cases, there is reason to believe ancient Israelite writers employed allusion in such a way as to create incongruity and incoherence at local text-segment levels while creating a coherent argument at larger text-segment levels. In these cases, at least, the text is still “readable.” https://doi.org/10.17159/2312–3621/2021/v34n1a9

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