Leviticus as Literature
Leviticus as Literature

Leviticus as Literature

by Mary Douglas

4.8 Rank Score: 5 from 1 reviews, 1 featured collections, and 0 user libraries
Pages 304
Publisher Oxford University Press
Published 2001
ISBN-13 978-0199244195
This first full-scale account of Leviticus by a world renowned anthropologist presents the biblical work as a literary masterpiece. Seen in an anthropological perspective Leviticus has a mystical structure which plots the book into three parts corresponding to the three parts of the desert tabernacle, both corresponding to the parts of Mount Sinai. This completely new reading transforms the interpretation of the purity laws. The pig and other forbidden animals are not abhorrent, they command the same respect due to all God's creatures. Boldly challenging several traditions of Bible criticism, Mary Douglas claims that Leviticus is not the narrow doctrine of a crabbed professional priesthood but a powerful intellectual statement about a modern religion which emphasizes God's justice and compassion.

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An anthropologist by training, Mary Douglas is a towering figure in the study of Leviticus, showing Israel’s ritual system to be symbolic expression that reflects on ancient Israelite cosmology (see Purity and Danger [1966]). This book isn’t a commentary in the traditional sense, but treats Leviticus as a whole, rehabilitating the stodgy reputation of the priests, and finding compassion and justice in the Israelite cult. [Full Review]