2012
DOI: 10.1353/pan.2012.0003
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Towards a Hermeneutics of Ambiguity: The Book of Esther and the Silence of Signs

Abstract: The “accidental” does not seem to have any place in modern literary theory. In narrative, everything is meant to have a function and therefore signify. Indeed, contingency, fortuitous coincidences, belongs rather to the domain of hermeneutics and interpretive projections. The Book of Esther confronts us with such a kind of “causality” which is both plausible and “unexpected.” It tells the story of an extermination plot in Ahasuerus’ court, which is finally undone via an “astonishingly” favorable series of… Show more

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“…Its plot is more plausible than the biblical Esther story, which is characterised by convolution and what Betty Rojtman and Jonathan Stavsky call an 'astonishingly favorable series of circumstances'. 36 The string of unlikely coincidences -so implausible as to warrant divine explanation for many -take on supernatural form in Polack's play so that the king's sleeplessness is figured as the visitation of Time itself to the king's bedside. For Benjamin, such supernatural elements confirm, not undermine, historicity because 'prophetic dreams', 'an almost obligatory ingredient of the drama', 'belonged to the domain of fate' (p. 134), or subjection to forces beyond human control.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Its plot is more plausible than the biblical Esther story, which is characterised by convolution and what Betty Rojtman and Jonathan Stavsky call an 'astonishingly favorable series of circumstances'. 36 The string of unlikely coincidences -so implausible as to warrant divine explanation for many -take on supernatural form in Polack's play so that the king's sleeplessness is figured as the visitation of Time itself to the king's bedside. For Benjamin, such supernatural elements confirm, not undermine, historicity because 'prophetic dreams', 'an almost obligatory ingredient of the drama', 'belonged to the domain of fate' (p. 134), or subjection to forces beyond human control.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%