Abstract
The collection of six essays on the book of Lamentations presented here are the outcome of an initiative begun in 2011 to gain the insights and perspectives of scholars in various areas of specialization on the “text” and “interpretation” of Lamentations. This initiative forms part of a larger research project that has the text and interpretation of Lamentations as its focal points. The contributors were invited to understand the two focal points as broadly or narrowly as they wished and to concentrate their efforts on an aspect of Lamentations research, a theme or feature of the book, a verse/verses/chapter(s) from the book, one or more of its textual representatives, or the book’s Wirkungsgeschichte. The results of the invitation are two essays on the textual representatives of Lamentations (Van Rooy [the ancient versions] and Kotzé [the Masoretic text and a Qumran manuscript]), an investigation of the theme of maternal cannibalism in Lamentations 2:20 and 4:10 (Bosman), an essay that comments on the absence/presence of YHWH in Lamentations 3 from the perspective of a specific type of Derridean philosophy of history/literature, namely hauntology (Gericke), and two contributions that touch on the reception of Lamentations in different periods of time and bodies of tradition (Jonker [rabbinic literature]; Naudé and Miller-Naudé [English Bible translations, especially the King James Bible]).
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