Jacob L. Wright
American scholar of the Hebrew Bible/Old Testament and the ancient Near East; professor and author working on biblical history, archaeology, and interpretation.
Books
This list of books are ONLY the books that have been ranked on the lists that are aggregated on this site. This is not a comprehensive list of all books by this author.
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1. Why The Bible Began
The book argues that the Hebrew Bible emerged as a cultural and technological product of writing rather than solely as a divinely transmitted corpus: as literacy and scribal practices spread in the ancient Near East, texts were composed, edited, and deployed to preserve memory, standardize beliefs, legitimize institutions, and bind communities across time and space. Using archaeological, epigraphic, and literary evidence, it traces how administrative record-keeping, social upheaval (including exile and return), and the needs of elites and communities for authoritative records combined to produce the idea of sacred scripture and to reshape religious life. Emphasizing the social functions of texts—political legitimation, legal codification, and identity formation—it shows that the material practice of writing was central to the Bible’s origin and authority.
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