ABSTRACT

Biblical Limits is a new series which brings to the traditional field of Biblical Studies literary criticism, anthropology and gender-based approaches, thus reaching new ways of understanding Biblical texts.

Jesus Framed is a collection of essays on reading the gospel of Mark. It uses literary theory, most notably the writings of Roland Barthes, to examine some of the difficulties in the text of Mark. A series of close readings of the gospel of Mark is compared to similar texts, both biblical and otherwise. Drawing on Mark's famous phrase that "to those who are outside all comes through parables" (Mark 4:11-12), Jesus Framed explores the boundaries between insiders and outsiders, those who can and those who cannot find a meaning in the text.

chapter |11 pages

Introduction: Rewriting the Text

chapter 1|21 pages

Jesus Framed

chapter 2|23 pages

Desire for an End

chapter 3|18 pages

Talitha Cum

chapter 4|24 pages

The Text Reads Itself

chapter 5|22 pages

Jesus's Frankness

chapter 6|25 pages

Reading Beyond Meaning

chapter 7|20 pages

Text, Intertext, Ideology

chapter |9 pages

Postscript: "Get Rid of It"