Socio-Rhetorical Interpretation Home Page

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Bibliography of Socio-Rhetorical Interpretation

Examples of Socio-Rhetorical Interpretation in Mark



(This page is currently under construction)

Mark: Action set

Mark: Cliques, gangs, action set, and faction

Mark: Corporate group

Mark: Ethics

Mark: Gnostic-manipulationist response

Mark: Human redemption

Mark: Intellectual discourse

Mark: Postmodern discourse

Mark: Religious community

Mark: Revolutionist response

Mark: Spirit being

Mark 2:25-26: Recitation

Mark 4: Cultural Intertexture

Mark 4:1-34: Echo

Mark 8:35: New historicism and chiasmus

Mark 9:20-22: Argumentative texture

Mark 15: Central storehouse economy

Mark 15: Challenge-riposte

Mark 15: Cultural intertexture

Mark 15: Dyadic personality

Mark 15: Historical intertexture

Mark 15: Honor

Mark 15: Ideology of power

Mark 15: Liminal and dominant culture

Mark 15: Limited good

Mark 15: Logical progression

Mark 15: Peasants

Mark 15: Purity codes

Mark 15: Reconfiguration

Mark 15: Recontextualization

Mark 15: Shame

Mark 15: Social intertexture

Mark 15:1-16:8: Deity

Mark 15:1-16:8: Holy person

Mark 15:1-16:8: Human committment

Mark 15:1-16:8: Narrational texture and pattern

Mark 15:1-16:8: Narrative amplification

Mark 15:1-16:8: Opening-middle-closing texture

Mark 15:1-16:8: Patron-client contract

Mark 15:1-16:8: Progressive texture

Mark 15:1-16:8: Repetitive texture

Mark 15:1-16:8: Thaumaturgical response

Mark 15:25-16:8: Qualitative progression


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Copyright © 1999 Emory University
Pages created and maintained by David Charnon
Last Updated June 16, 1999