Celebrating the five hundredth volume, this Festschrift honors David M. Gunn, one of the founders of the Journal of Old Testament Studies, later the Library of Hebrew Bible/Old Testament Studies, and offers essays representing cutting-edge interpretations of the David material in the Hebrew Bible and later literary and popular culture. Essays in Part One, Relating to David, present David in relationship to other characters in Samuel. These essays demonstrate the value of close reading, analysis of literary structure, and creative, disciplined readerly imagination in interpreting biblical texts in general and understanding the character of David in particular. Part Two, Reading David, expands the narrative horizon. These essays analyze the use of the David character in larger biblical narrative contexts. David is understood as a literary icon that communicates and disrupts meaning in different ways in different context. More complex modes of interpretation enter in, including theories of metaphor, memory and history, psychoanalysis, and post-colonialism. Part Three, Singing David, shifts the focus to the portrayal of David as singer and psalmist, interweaving in mutually informative ways both with visual evidence from the ancient Near East depicting court musicians and with the titles and language of the biblical psalms. Part Four, Receiving David, highlights moments in the long history of interpretation of the king in popular culture, including poetry, visual art, theatre, and children's literature. Finally, the essays in Part Five, Re-locating David, represent some of the intellectually and ethically vital interpretative work going on in contexts outside the U.S. and Europe.
Tod Linafelt is professor of biblical literature at Georgetown University in Washington DC. Author of Surviving Lamentations and a commentary on the book of Ruth, and editor or co-editor of four books.
Florence Harkness Professor of Religion at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio. His research and writing focuses on the cultural history of the Bible. He is author of several books, including Roadside Religion: In Search of the Sacred, the Profane, and the Substance of Faith and Mel Gibson's Bible. He has published essays on the Bible and popular culture in The New York Times, The Washington Post, and The Chronicle of Higher Education, and his work has been featured on National Public Radio's All Things Considered. He it co-editor, with Tod Linafelt, of the book series Afterlives of the Bible with the University of Chicago Press. His next book, The End of the Word As We Know It (Harcourt, 2009), examines the Bible business and the Christian culture industry in America.