Browsing Divinity School Faculty Works by Author "Sasson, Jack M."
Now showing items 21-40 of 102
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Sasson, Jack M. (Brill Academic Publishers, 2010)
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Sasson, Jack M. (Blackwell Publishing, 2006)"We must not doubt that stories were told and enjoyed long before humans learned how to transpose what the ear hears into what the eye sees. Whether brief or developed, transmitted verbatim or embellished, these tales were ...
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Sasson, Jack M. (Union Theological Seminary in Virginiahttp://www.interpretation.org/index.htm, 1976)
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Sasson, Jack M. (2004)
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Sasson, Jack M. (History Today, 1968)
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Sasson, Jack M. (Neukirchener Verlagshaus, 1976)"The main purpose of this paper, offered in tribute to the doyen of Sumerian belles-lettres, is to collect the Mari evidence on the figure of the E/i. Its conclusions do not mean to dispute the third definition of the CAD ...
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Sasson, Jack M. (Brill, 2009)
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Sasson, Jack M. (SAGE, 2004)
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Sasson, Jack M. (Sheffield Phoenix Press, 2012)
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Sasson, Jack M. (Eisenbraunshttps://www.eisenbrauns.com/ECOM/_2ZS0VXQJV.HTM, 2003)
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Sasson, Jack M. (1973)
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Sasson, Jack M. (Zeitschrift für die Alttestamentliche Wissenschaft, 1978)The purpose of this paper is to focus, once more (l), attention on a genealogical procedure which obtained among Hebrew chronographers(2). Simply stated, this paper will hold that, in some cases, minimal alterations were ...
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Sasson, Jack M. (Ugarit-Verlag, 1974)
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Sasson, Jack M. (Ugarit-Forschungen, 1974)
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Sasson, Jack M. (American Schools of Oriental Research, 1968)
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Sasson, Jack M. (Brillhttp://www.brill.nl/vt, 1976)"This paper will proceed as follows: it will establish a plausible translation for Isa. lxvi 3-4a, discuss a Mari letter, ARM II : 37, and allude to other Near Eastern documentation in order to focus on an unusual practice ...
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Sasson, Jack M. (American Oriental Societyhttp://www.umich.edu/~aos/index.html, 1998)
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Sasson, Jack M. (Hendrickson, 1995)
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Sasson, Jack M. (S.A.R.G.O.N Editrice e Libreria, 2004)
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Sasson, Jack M. (Eisenbrauns, 1981)"...folk tales as well as fairy tales do create protagonists who never existed and do assign them tasks that have no historical bases. More commonly however, we either find protagonists with modest actual achievements ...