David Carr
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Writing On The Tablet Of The Heart
$94.00Add to cartIn Writing on the Tablet of the Heart , David Carr explores a new model for the production, revision, and reception of ancient texts. The Gilgamesh epic, Homer’s Iliad , and the Bible, he shows, were first and foremost intended as educational texts. The primary focus was not on writing such texts on tablets or papyrus, but inscribing hallowed writings, word for word, on the hearts of elite members of society. Carr begins by examining the key concepts of orality, cultural memory, and literacy, and then synthesizes scholarship on writing and education in ancient Mesopotamia, Egypt, Greece, and Israel. He shows how each of these cultures formed elites by having young people (usually male) master a body of ancient texts, often written in an archaic dialect or foreign language. By this process, whether or not it occurred in a formal educational setting, select members of society were trained for leadership by learning to read, write, recite, and/or sing this body of texts. We can see the marks of this process in secular and religious educational institutions even today. Elite secular education is still prone to cultivate mastery of ancient, esoteric cultural knowledge, even if the focus has broadened from the Iliad to a range of core literary texts. Moreover, Judaism, Christianity, and Islam have been profoundly shaped by early Jewish educational practices, which focused on mastery of the Hebrew Bible defined in opposition to the Greek curriculum and Greek culture. emerged as a support for an educational process in which These ancient forms of education, Carr demonstrates, have much to teach us not only about the Hebrew Bible and ancient Israelite culture, but about how religious and secular groups are formed by having ancient, cherished traditions “written on the heart” of the next generation.
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Erotic World
$25.00Add to cartHistorically, the Bible has been used to drive a wedge between the spirit and the body. In this provocative book, David Carr argues that it can–and should–do just the opposite. Sexuality and spirituality, Carr contends, are intricately interwoven: when one is impoverished, the other is warped. As a result, the journey toward God and the life-long engagement with our own sexual embodiment are inseparable. Humans, the Bible tells us, both male and female, were created in God’s image, and eros–a fundamental longing for connection that finds abstract good in the pleasure we derive from the stimulation of the senses–is a central component of that image. The Bible, particularly the Hebrew Bible, affirms erotic passion, both eros between humans and eros between God and humans. In a sweeping examination of the sexual rules of the Bible, Carr asserts that Biblical “family values” are a far cry from anything promoted as such in contemporary politics. He concludes that passionate love–our preoccupation therewith and pursuit thereof–is the primary human vocation, that eros is in fact the flavoring of life.