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Currents in Biblical Research
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Orality and the Gospels: A Survey of Recent Research

Kelly R. Iverson

University of St Andrews, Scotland, ki10{at}st-andrews.ac.uk

In the last thirty years there have been significant developments in the application of orality studies to the Gospels. The objective of this article is to provide an overview of the field through a survey of its leading proponents, including Werner Kelber, Joanna Dewey, Paul Achtemeier, Peter Botha, Richard Horsley and Jonathan Draper, Kenneth Bailey, James Dunn, Richard Bauckham, David Rhoads and Whitney Shiner. The essay begins with a discussion of several foundational studies, before turning specifically to the reconception of orality and the implication of this research for the Gospels. The study concludes that, while an appreciation of orality has made inroads into certain segments of Gospels research, it remains a neglected and underexploited dimension of NT interpretation.

Key Words: Gospels • Historical Jesus • orality • oral tradition • performance.

Currents in Biblical Research, Vol. 8, No. 1, 71-106 (2009)
DOI: 10.1177/1476993X09341489


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