67
23 CHAPTER ONE INTERTEXTUALITY Concepts of intertextuality It is not my intention to provide a complete background and discussion of the concepts of intertextuality or intertextualities that have sprung up in the last twenty-five years: the models, theories, and discussions grow in number every year. 1 What I intend to do is broadly discuss the models and theories which seem most relevant to developing a model of my own for work with the ancient texts at hand. Thus I will discuss some of the work by Julia Kristeva, Michael Riffaterre, Roland Barthes, and Jonathan Culler pertaining to intertextuality; and I will point out some of the more interesting discussions of shorter length. I will also discuss how the ancients saw the relationships of texts to other texts. Then I will turn to the model of intertextuality as dialogism as discussed in the work of Bakhtin and Lotman, and finally I will outline the theoretical framework that will be used in this dissertation. I will conclude the chapter by looking at the nature and function (genre) of the Cyropaedia and Chronicles, which will become important because of the direction of the development of the theoretical framework.

Inter Text Uality

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Kristeva

Citation preview

Page 1: Inter Text Uality

23

CHAPTER ONE

INTERTEXTUALITY

Concepts of intertextuality

I t i s not my i nt ent i on t o pr ovi de a compl et e backgr ound and

di scussi on of t he concept s of i nt er t ext ual i t y or

i nt er t ext ual i t i es t hat have spr ung up i n t he l ast t went y- f i ve

year s: t he model s, t heor i es, and di scuss i ons gr ow i n number ever y

year . 1 What I i nt end t o do i s br oadl y di scuss t he model s and

t heor i es whi ch seem most r el evant t o devel opi ng a model of my own

f or wor k wi t h t he anci ent t ext s at hand. Thus I wi l l di scuss

some of t he wor k by Jul i a Kr i s t eva, Mi chael Ri f f at er r e, Rol and

Bar t hes, and Jonat han Cul l er per t ai ni ng t o i nt er t ext ual i t y ; and I

wi l l poi nt out some of t he mor e i nt er est i ng di scussi ons of

shor t er l engt h. I wi l l al so di scuss how t he anci ent s saw t he

r el at i onshi ps of t ext s t o ot her t ext s. Then I wi l l t ur n t o t he

model of i nt er t ext ual i t y as di al ogi sm as di scussed i n t he wor k of

Bakht i n and Lot man, and f i nal l y I wi l l out l i ne t he t heor et i cal

f r amewor k t hat wi l l be used i n t hi s di sser t at i on. I wi l l

concl ude t he chapt er by l ook i ng at t he nat ur e and f unct i on

( genr e) of t he Cyr opaedi a and Chr oni c l es, whi ch wi l l become

i mpor t ant because of t he di r ect i on of t he devel opment of t he

t heor et i cal f r amewor k.

Page 2: Inter Text Uality

24

Hei nr i ch Pl et t char act er i zes t wo t ypes of schol ar s whom

he cal l s “ i nt er t ext ual i s t s : ” t he pr ogr essi ves and t he

t r adi t i onal i st s, bot h conf r ont ed by t he “ ant i - i nt er t ext ual i s t s . ”

The pr ogr ess i ves ar e t hose who “ t r y t o cul t i vat e and devel op t he

r evol ut i onar y her i t age of t he or i gi nat or s of t he new concept ; ”

t hey base t hei r wor k on t he wor k of Bakht i n, Bar t hes, and

Kr i s t eva, and wor k on i nt er t ext ual i t y f r om a phi l osophi cal or

semi ot i c per spect i ve ( 3) . Pl et t char act er i zes t hi s wor k as

“ el i t i st ” and “ esot er i c, ” and cl ai ms t hat ,

Thi s “ school ” has never devel oped a compr ehensi bl e and

t eachabl e met hod of t ext ual anal ys i s . I t s

publ i cat i ons ar e mar ked by a s t r angel y abst r act

qual i t y [ …] [ whi ch] i mpede t hei r under st andabi l i t y but

al so sur r ound t hei r cr i t i cal ent er pr i se wi t h an aur a

of myst er y and exc l usi veness. ( 4)

The t r adi t i onal i st s, on t he ot her hand, ar e convent i onal l i t er ar y

schol ar s who have t r i ed t o appl y not i ons of i nt er t ext ual i t y i n

t hei r own wor k. Some, who ar e mor e concer ned wi t h t heor y, have

used t he t er m i n or der t o “ i mpr ove t hei r met hodol ogi cal and

t er mi nol ogi cal i nst r ument s” ( 4) , and t hus have made

i nt er t ext ual i t y mor e r el evant and under st andabl e. But , war ns

Pl et t , t he downsi de t o t hi s appl i cabi l i t y i s t hat some schol ar s

use t he t er m wi t hout exami ni ng i t s backgr ound and meani ng, t hus

t ur ni ng i t i nt o a “ vogue wor d” ( 4) . Bei ng nei t her a phi l osopher

nor a semi ot i c i an mysel f ( as ar e t he pr ogr essi ves i n Pl et t ’ s

Page 3: Inter Text Uality

25

cat egor i zat i on) , I suppose I must pl ace mysel f her e. However ,

I hope t o devel op a t heor et i cal backgr ound t o my i nt er pr et i ve

met hod so t hat I can asser t t hat I am not si mpl y usi ng

i nt er t ext ual i t y as a “ vogue wor d. ”

The ant i - i nt er t ext ual i st s Pl et t char act er i zes as t hose

schol ar s who: 1) deny t hat anyt hi ng new i s bei ng done by t he

t r adi t i onal i st s; t hey cl ai m t hat i nt er t ext ual wor k has been done

si nce ant i qui t y, and t hat t hus al l we have i s a change i n

t er mi nol ogy; and 2) si mpl y br ush of f t he wor k of t he

pr ogr ess i ves. Thus i nt er t ext ual i t y i s “ accused of bei ng

i ncompr ehensi bl e on t he one hand and ol d wi ne i n new bot t l es on

t he ot her ” ( 5) .

Pl et t al so poi nt s out t he i mpor t ance of t i me ( i . e. ,

hi st or i cal cont ext of t ext s) i n di scussi ons of i nt er t ext ual i t y .

Ther e ar e t wo di f f er ent appr oaches: t he synchr oni c and t he

di achr oni c . The synchr oni c appr oach posi t s t hat al l t ext s ar e

i nt er r el at ed, r egar dl ess of cont ext ; Pl et t asser t s t hat t hi s i s

not hel pf ul f or t r ue schol ar shi p. The di achr oni c appr oach uses

“ met i cul ousl y r esear ched i nt er t ext ual i t i es; ” by addi ng i n t he

axi s of semant i cs, Pl et t ar gues, i nt er t ext ual i t y can “ r esume i t s

di al ogue wi t h r eal i t y” ( 25- 26) . He al so poi nt s out t hat al t hough

i nt er t ext ual i t y i s not l i mi t ed t o cer t ai n per i ods, i n cer t ai n

per i ods t her e i s mor e use of i t t han i n ot her s ( hi s exampl es wer e

moder ni sm and post moder ni sm) . He wonder s i f per haps

i nt er t ext ual i t y i s a s i gnal of “ cul t ur al decadence” ( 26) .

Page 4: Inter Text Uality

26

Jul i a Kr i s t eva

As i s wel l known, Kr i s t eva coi ned t he t er m

“ i nt er t ext ual i t y ” i n her r eadi ngs of t he wor k of Bakht i n. I t

f i r s t appear s i n her essay “ Le mot , l e di al ogue et l e r oman”

( Semei ot i kè 143- 173) . 2 I n t hi s essay, she poi nt s out t hat

Bakht i n was t he f i r s t t o i nt r oduce t hi s not i on i nt o l i t er ar y

t heor y: al l t ext s ar e const r uct ed as a mosai c of c i t at i ons. She

t hen def i nes i nt er t ext ual i t y as, “ t out t ext e est absor pt i on et

t r ansf or mat i on d’ un aut r e t ext e” ( 146) . She uses t he not i on of

i nt er t ext ual i t y i n t he pl ace of t he not i on of i nt er subj ect i v i t y.

I n t hi s essay, Kr i st eva exami nes nar r at i on as a di al ogi c

mat r i x . She syst emat i zes Bakht i n by usi ng monol ogi c di scour se t o

r ef er t o epi c, hi s t or i cal di scour se and sc i ent i f i c di scour se, and

di al ogi c di scour se t o r ef er t o car ni val , sat i r e and t he

pol yphoni c novel ; t hese l at t er ar e al l t ext ual f or ms wher e

wr i t i ng r eads anot her wr i t i ng ( 158- 159) . Al t hough she f ol l ows

Bakht i n i n seei ng t he novel as comi ng out of t he end of t he

Mi ddl e Ages ( 133- 37) , she not es t hat t he pr ecur sor t o t he sat i r e

( i nc l udi ng t he anci ent Gr eek novel ) was t he Socr at i c di al ogue; i t

was ul t i mat el y t hese f or ms t hat l ed t o t he novel ( 164- 68) .

For Kr i s t eva i n t hi s essay, di al ogi sm si t uat es a

phi l osophi cal pr obl em i n l anguage, speci f i cal l y i n l anguage as a

cor r el at i on of t ext s ( 172) . We can see t he out s i de t ext br ought

i nt o t he t ext ei t her as r emi ni scence or as c i t at i on ( 194) . We

Page 5: Inter Text Uality

27

wi l l see f ur t her at t empt s t o deal wi t h t hi s pr obl em i n t he wor k

of Lot man, whi ch I wi l l di scuss bel ow.

Some of Kr i s t eva’ s wor k on poet i c t ext s i n t hi s essay i s

al so i nst r uct i ve i n exami ni ng her concept i on of i nt er t ext ual i t y.

She sees poet i c ut t er ances as a subset of t he t ext ual space: t he

poet i c s i gni f i ed i s def i ned as wher e many codes meet ; t hese codes

f i nd t hemsel ves i n a negat i ve r el at i onshi p t o each ot her . Moder n

poet i c t ext s absor b and dest r oy ( at t he same t i me) ot her t ext s of

t he i nt er t ext ual space; t he poet i c t ext i s pr oduced i n t he

s i mul t aneous af f i r mat i on and negat i on of anot her t ext ( 255- 57) .

Thi s not i on of t he s i mul t aneous absor pt i on and dest r uct i on of

t ext s wi l l become i mpor t ant i n t he t heor et i cal f r amewor k I wi l l

devel op l at er i n t hi s chapt er .

I n Le t ext e du r oman, Kr i s t eva f ur t her devel ops t he i dea of

i nt er t ext ual i t y. Fi r s t , she def i nes t he t ext as,

[ U] n appar ei l t r ansl i ngui s t i que que r edi st r i bue

l ’ or dr e de l a l angue, en met t ant en r el at i on une

par ol e communi cat i ve v i sant l ’ i nf or mat i on di r ect e,

avec di f f ér ent s t ypes d’ énoncés ant ér i eur s ou

synchr oni ques. ( 12)

The t ext i s t hus a “ pr oduct i vi t é; ” t hat i s , i t can cr oss l ogi cal

and mat hemat i cal cat egor i es beyond pur el y l i ngui st i c ones. I t i s

a per mut at i on of t ext s , an “ i nt er - t ext ual i t é: ” i n t he space of

one t ext many ut t er ances f r om ot her t ext s meet and neut r al i ze

each ot her ( an i dea devel oped f r om her ear l i er wor k i n

Page 6: Inter Text Uality

28

Semei ot i kè) . She t hen def i nes t he i deol ogeme ( i déol ogème) as

t he i nt er t ext ual f unct i on t hat appear s i n di f f er ent l evel s i n t he

st r uct ur e of each t ext : t he means by whi ch t he ut t er ances ar e

t r ansf or med i nt o t he whol e t ext ( 12, cf . Semei ot i kè 114) .

I n Le t ext e du r oman, Kr i s t eva f ur t her el abor at es on t he

wor k of Bakht i n. She poi nt s out t hat i n di al ogi sm, wr i t i ng

( l ’ écr i t ur e) i s mar ked as bot h subj ect i v i t y and communi cat i v i t y;

wr i t i ng i s ambi val ent ( 90) . She al so i ndi cat es t hat “ l e

di al ogi sme est i nhér ent au l angage méme” ( 89) . I n her di scuss i on

of t he novel , she i ndi cat es ( f ur t her i ng Bakht i n) t hat t he novel

wor ks i n t he i nt er t ext ual space; al l novel s ar e pol yphoni c ( 176) .

I n or der t o st udy how t he novel wor ks as a t r ansf or mat i on we have

t o l ook at t he t ext ual di al ogue ( di al ogue of many t ext s) , i . e. ,

t he i nt er t ext ual i t y. Her e she def i nes i nt er t ext ual i t y as t he

meet i ng and mut ual modi f i cat i on of t he uni t i es bel ongi ng t o

di f f er ent t ext s i n t he new t ext ( 68) . Fur t her , she def i nes

l i t er at ur e as al l di scour se t hat uses t he mode of i nt er t ext ual i t y

( 69) . Ther ef or e, al t hough she di scusses t he novel as t he pr i mar y

genr e t hr ough whi ch i nt er t ext ual i t y can oper at e, I t hi nk i t i s

possi bl e t o see her wor k as havi ng a wi der appl i cat i on.

Mi chael Ri f f at er r e

I n Ri f f at er r e’ s ear l i er wor k, he uses Pei r ce’ s semi ot i c

t heor i es i n or der t o f ocus on t he concept of t he i nt er pr et ant .

The i nt er pr et ant i s a t ext ual si gn, “ a f r agment of t hat t ext

act ual l y quot ed i n t he poem i t ser ves t o i nt er pr et , ” whi ch may be

Page 7: Inter Text Uality

29

a quot at i on mar ked as such, or may be a quot at i on not

di f f er ent i at ed f r om i t s new t ext ual cont ext ( Semi ot i cs 109) .

Ri f f at er r e di s t i ngui shes bet ween t wo t ypes of i nt er pr et ant s:

t ext ual i nt er pr et ant s and l exemat i c i nt er pr et ant s. Text ual

i nt er pr et ant s he def i nes as t ext s whi ch mi ght be ei t her quot ed or

al l uded t o; t hese t ext s can medi at e bet ween one semi ot i c code and

anot her . Lexemat i c i nt er pr et ant s he def i nes as wor ds whi ch mi ght

gener at e t wo t ext s or t wo hypogr ams ( syst ems of si gns)

s i mul t aneousl y . The i nt er pr et ant , t her ef or e, i s an i nt er t ext ual

s i gn, a si gn “ t hat t r ans l at es t he t ext ’ s sur f ace s i gns and

expl ai ns what el se t he t ext suggest s” ( Semi ot i cs 81) . When we

see t hat a t ext ( i nt er t ext ) i s ungr ammat i cal i n i t s semi ot i c

syst em, t hen we see t hat t hi s i nt er t ext bel ongs t o anot her

semi ot i c syst em ( Semi ot i cs 164) .

For Ri f f at er r e, l i t er at ur e i s an act of communi cat i on

gui ded by t hr ee r ul es: 1) t he act i s a game gui ded by t he t ext ;

2) t he game i s pl ayed accor di ng t o l i ngui s t i c r ul es; and 3)

r eal i t y and t he aut hor ar e t he t ext ’ s subst i t ut es. The t ext i s

bot h a l i mi t i ng and a pr escr i pt i ve code ( Pr oduct i on 10- 11) . I n

l ook i ng at t he i ssue of l i t er ar y hi s t or y and f or mal anal ys i s , he

suggest s t hat t he t wo appr oaches t o t he st udy of t he l i t er ar y

t ext ar e compl ement ar y. For mal anal ysi s of t he t ext when

combi ned wi t h l i t er ar y hi s t or y hel ps t o show t he ef f ect of t he

t ext on t he r eader ; f or hi m, t he or i gi nal meani ng of t he t ext i s

t he meani ng i t had f or i t s f i r st r eader s ( Pr oduct i on 89, 104- 5) .

Page 8: Inter Text Uality

30

We wi l l see bel ow t hat Lot man al so di scusses t he r el at i onshi p

of t ext and audi ence i n mor e det ai l .

The i mpor t ance of Ri f f at er r e’ s wor k f or t he pr obl em of

i nt er t ext ual i t y comes mai nl y f r om hi s i nsi st ence on t he

i mpor t ance of t he r eader i n t ext pr oduct i on. The r eader i s t he

onl y one who makes t he connect i on bet ween t he t ext , i nt er pr et ant

and i nt er t ext ( Semi ot i cs 164) . Thus l i t er ar y pr oduct i on i nc l udes

t he r eader and t he r eader ’ s r eact i ons as wel l as t he t ext ; and

t he l i t er ar y phenomenon i s not l ocat ed i n t he r el at i onshi p

bet ween t he aut hor and t he t ext but bet ween t he t ext and t he

r eader ( Pr oduct i on 9, 89) . Never t hel ess, r eadi ng i s r est r i c t i ve.

The r eader i s under t he gui dance and cont r ol of t he var i ous

i nt er t ext s ; when t he t ext act i vat es an i nt er t ext , i t cont r ol s t he

r eader ’ s r esponse, t hus mai nt ai ni ng t he t ext ’ s i dent i t y

( “ Compul sor y” 57) . Even so, r eadi ng i s al so unst abl e, and

“ i nt er pr et at i on i s never f i nal ” as t he t ext cannot be “ cor r ect or

amended” by t he r eader ( Semi ot i cs 165) . Text ual i t y and

i nt er t ext ual i t y cannot be separ at ed, i n Ri f f at er r e’ s v i ew,

because what t he t ext l eaves unsai d, t he i nt er t ext spel l s out

( “ I nt er t ext ual i t y” 781) .

Ri f f at er r e def i nes t he i nt er t ext as “ a t ext or ser i es of

t ext s sel ect ed as r ef er ent s by t he t ext we ar e r eadi ng. ”

Al t hough i t i s hi dden, we can i dent i f y i t f r om el ement s i n t he

t ext , and i n f act , we ar e i nvi t ed t o do so ( Fi ct i onal 86) . He

cal l s t he i nt er t ext t he “ unconsci ous of f i ct i on” ( Fi ct i onal 91) .

Page 9: Inter Text Uality

31

He suggest s t hat l i t er ar i ness can onl y be f ound wher e t ext s

combi ne or r ef er t o ot her t ext s on t he l evel of i nt er t ext ual i t y.

However , he al so poi nt s out t hat we must di s t i ngui sh bet ween

knowl edge of t he i nt er t ext ’ s f or m and cont ent and an awar eness

t hat an i nt er t ext ex i s t s , al t hough s i mpl y bei ng awar e may be

enough t o exper i ence t he l i t er ar i ness of t he t ext . We must al so

di st i ngui sh bet ween t he i nt er t ext and i nt er t ext ual i t y, whi ch he

def i nes as a “ web of f unct i ons t hat const i t ut es and r egul at es t he

r el at i onshi ps bet ween t ext and i nt er t ext ” ( “ Compul sor y” 56- 57) .

Ri f f at er r e suggest s t hat t her e ar e “ s i gnpost s, ” i . e. , wor ds or

phr ases t hat i ndi cat e an obscur i t y or di f f i cul t y i n t he t ext , and

wher e t he sol ut i on mi ght be f ound: t hese s i gnpost s l i nk t he t ext

and i nt er t ext . However , t he r eader can compensat e f or t he l oss

of t he i nt er t ext s si nce t hey ar e s t abi l i t i es i n t he t ext

( “ Compul sor y” 57- 58, 74) .

For Ri f f at er r e, t hen, unl i ke i n Kr i s t eva’ s wor k,

i nt er t ext ual i t y i s not somet hi ng t hat oper at es as an

i nt er r el at i onshi p bet ween al l t ext s, but r at her as somet hi ng t hat

oper at es as a r el at i onshi p bet ween speci f i c t ext s, t hr ough t he

t ool of t he i nt er pr et ant . I nt er t ext ual i t y i s not a f r ee- f l owi ng

concept , but r at her a “ s t r uct ur ed net wor k of t ext - gener at ed

const r ai nt s on t he r eader ’ s per cept i ons” ( “ I nt er t ext ual i t y ” 781) .

I nt er t ext ual i t y, accor di ng t o Ri f f at er r e, 1) exc l udes i r r el evant

dat a; 2) i s gener at ed by t ext ual i t y; 3) connect s exi st i ng t ext s

wi t h ot her t ext s ; 4) decont ext ual i zes t he t ext and f ocuses on i t s

Page 10: Inter Text Uality

32

l i t er ar i ness; and 5) i s a cl osed exchange bet ween t he t ext and

i nt er t ext ( “ I nt er t ext ual i t y” 786) . Thi s i s a way of l ooki ng at

i nt er t ext ual i t y not as a web, but r at her as an i nf i ni t e l i ne of

s i gni f i cat i on: a chai n. Accor di ng t o hi s model , t her ef or e, i t i s

not appr opr i at e t o pi ck t ext s r andoml y t o associ at e, but r at her

one must pi ck t ext s t hat seem al r eady t o be associ at ed i n some

way.

Rol and Bar t hes

I am pr i mar i l y concer ned wi t h Bar t hes ’ wor k as expr essed i n

S/ Z and i n t he ar t i c l e “ Text e ( Théor i e du) . ” I n t he ar t i c l e, he

di scusses t he t ext and i nt er t ext , and def i nes i nt er t ext ual i t y as

f ol l ows,

L’ i nt er t ext ual i t é, condi t i on de t out t ext e, quel qu’ i l

soi t , ne se r édui t évi demment pas à un pr obl ème de

sour ces ou d’ i nf l uences; l ’ i nt er t ext est un champ

génér al de f or mul es anonymes, dont l ’ or i gi ne est

r ar ement r epér abl e, de c i t at i ons i nconsci ent es ou

aut omat i ques données sans gui l l emet s. ( 1015)

The concept of i nt er t ext ual i t y , f or Bar t hes, makes t he t ext not a

“ r epr oduct i on” but a “ pr oduct i vi t y . ” But what i s t he t ext ? I t

i s not a l i t er ar y wor k per se, but r at her t he ent i r e f i el d of

l anguage, al t hough t he t ext i s onl y v i si bl e i n a l i t er ar y wor k.

The t ext i s a t i ssue or weavi ng ( 1015- 16) . Thi s way of l ook i ng

at t he t ext necessi t at es t he i nt r oduct i on of r eadi ng and t he

r eader ( “ [ L] a t héor i e du t ext e él ar gi t à l ’ i nf i ni t i l es l i ber t és

Page 11: Inter Text Uality

33

de l a l ect ur e. ” ) so t hat al l l i t er ar y wor ks may be r ead wi t h

each ot her . As wel l , Bar t hes ar gues t hat wr i t i ng and r eadi ng ar e

equi val ent i n t hei r pr oduct i vi t y ( 1016) .

I n S/ Z, Bar t hes wr i t es t hat i n or der t o i nt er pr et a t ext ,

one must appr eci at e t he pl ur al i t y f r om whi ch i t i s made. The

i deal t ext i s f or med of var i ous codes i nt er act i ng wi t hout one

bei ng super i or t o t he r est . Each code i s a voi ce, and t he t ext

i s woven or br ai ded f r om t he conver gence of t he codes. Bar t hes

names f i ve codes: t he voi ces of Empi r i cs, t he Per son, Sc i ence,

Tr ut h and Symbol ( 11- 12, 28) . For Bar t hes, t her e i s not hi ng

out s i de t he t ext , and l i t er at ur e i s a si ngl e t ext , what he cal l ed

a t ext wi t h a t housand ent r ances – when one ent er s t he t ext , one

ai ms f or a per spect i ve on ot her codes, or f r agment s ( 12, 19) .

Thi s i dea of t he t ext as bei ng sel f - cont ai ned i s , I t hi nk, now

passé; t he cont ext of l i t er ar y pr oduct i on i s now seen as al so

i mpor t ant . However , f or a t ext l i ke Chr oni c l es, when t he cont ext

of l i t er ar y pr oduct i on i s ext r emel y har d t o det er mi ne, l ooki ng at

t he sel f - cont ai ned t ext may be an i mpor t ant i nt er pr et i ve

st r at egy.

One of Bar t hes ’ mor e i nt er est i ng poi nt s i s t hat t he cr i t i c

shoul d r ead t he t ext not onl y as a f i r st r eadi ng but al so as a

r er eadi ng ( 22) . Thi s i s i mpor t ant , I t hi nk, because i t br i ngs

f or war d t he i dea t hat t he r eader of t he t ext i s f or med by a

pl ur al i t y of t ext s , even when t he t ext s ar e f or med by codes whose

or i gi ns ar e l ost ( 16) .

Page 12: Inter Text Uality

34

Jonat han Cul l er

I n The Pur sui t of Si gns, Cul l er of f er s a cr i t i que of ot her

wor k on i nt er t ext ual i t y; he al so of f er s suggest i ons of hi s own

about t he phenomenon. For hi m, i nt er t ext ual i t y has a doubl e

f ocus: 1) i t poi nt s out t he i mpor t ance of pr ev i ous t ext s ; i t

poi nt s out t hat t he not i on of t he aut onomy of t ext s i s

mi sl eadi ng, because t ext s have meani ng onl y because ot her t ext s

have been wr i t t en; and 2) i t l eads us t o consi der t he pr ev i ous

t ext s as cont r i but i ng t o a code whi ch makes meani ng poss i bl e. He

l ooks at i nt er t ext ual i t y as a name f or a t ext ’ s “ par t i ci pat i on i n

t he di scur si ve space of a cul t ur e” ( 103) . Ther ef or e,

i nt er t ext ual i t y i s not t he s t udy of sour ces or i nf l uences, but i s

wi der i n scope, i ncl udi ng codes t hat ar e now l ost t hat make

possi bl e t he meani ngs of l at er t ext s . He t hus suggest s t hat

t her e ar e good r easons t o excl ude t he st udy of al l us i on f r om

i nt er t ext ual i t y ( 103- 4) . However , he al so caut i ons t hat

r est r i ct i ng t he scope of i nt er t ext ual i t y f or t he pr act i cal

r easons of t ext ual anal ysi s i s not i nnocent , but r at her quest i ons

t he cl ai ms made f or t he concept of i nt er t ext ual i t y as a whol e.

I nt er t ext ual i t y i s meant t o be a gener al t heor y, but when i t i s

appl i ed, i t i s of t en nar r owed down t o such a poi nt t hat t he

gener al i t y of t he t heor y i s ar guabl e ( 105) . Thus he suggest s

t hat when we l ook at i nt er t ext ual i t y , we shoul d f ocus on “ t he

condi t i ons of meani ng i n l i t er at ur e” and “ r el at e a l i t er ar y wor k

t o a whol e ser i es of ot her wor ks, t r eat i ng t hem not as sour ces

Page 13: Inter Text Uality

35

but as const i t uent s of a genr e, f or exampl e, whose convent i ons

we at t empt t o i nf er ” ( 117) . I n t hi s way, we can l ook at

i nt er t ext ual i t y as a t ool f or exami ni ng t he pl ace of var i ous

l i t er ar y wor ks i n genr es. By l ook i ng at how t ext s i nt er r el at e,

we can see what t hey have i n common t hat we mi ght ot her wi se

over l ook. Thi s concept wi l l become ver y i mpor t ant as I at t empt

t o l ook at t he r el at i onshi p bet ween Chr oni c l es and t he Cyr opaedi a

i n t hi s di sser t at i on.

Cul l er makes some i nt er est i ng obser vat i ons about some of

t he ot her t heor i st s t hat I have al r eady di scussed. He poi nt s out

t hat Kr i st eva’ s pr ocedur e of l ooki ng at sour ce t ext s f or anal ysi s

of i nt er t ext ual space shows how t he concept of i nt er t ext ual i t y

l eads t o a concent r at i on on cases t hat quest i on t he gener al

t heor y of i nt er t ext ual i t y. Whi l e she cl ai med t hat meani ng i s

made possi bl e t hr ough a gener al i nt er t ext ual i t y, t hr ough her

exampl es we see t hat i nt er t ext ual i t y wor ks best when we can

i dent i f y t he pr et ext s. When deal i ng wi t h t he wor k of Ri f f at er r e,

he asks whet her t he r eader i s obl i ged t o per cei ve what Ri f f at er r e

di d i n t he t ext , or does t he r eader have f r eedom. He poi nt s out

t hat t her e i s a t ens i on i n Ri f f at er r e’ s wor k, bet ween hi s desi r e

bot h t o out per f or m ot her schol ar s, and hi s des i r e t o devel op a

semi ot i cs t hat expl ai ns how r eader s i nt er pr et ( 93- 94) .

The wor k of Har ol d Bl oom comes i n f or a good deal of

cr i t i c i sm i n Cul l er ’ s wor k. Al t hough Bl oom i ndi cat es t hat t ext s

ar e not a wr i t i ng but a r ewr i t i ng, and t hat we cannot wr i t e or

Page 14: Inter Text Uality

36

r ead wi t hout i mi t at i ng what ot her s have done, as i t has been

medi at ed by t he t r adi t i on ( Poet r y 2- 3; Map 32) , he shi f t s t he

f ocus f r om t he r el at i onshi p of t ext s t o t ext s or t ext s and

r eader s t o a f ocus on aut hor s and t ext s. For hi m, poet s at t empt

t o over come t hei r pr edecessor s, and t he not i on of i nf l uence means

t hat t ext s ar e pr oduced when one aut hor mi sr eads anot her ( Poet r y

2; Map 3; Anxi et y 30) . Bl oom i s onl y concer ned wi t h “ st r ong”

aut hor s, who st r uggl e wi t h t hei r “ st r ong” pr edecessor s; “ Weaker

t al ent s i deal i ze, f i gur es of capabl e i magi nat i on appr opr i at e f or

t hemsel ves” ( Anxi et y 5) . Cul l er poi nt s out t hat al l of t hi s put s

Bl oom at odds wi t h Kr i st eva, Bar t hes, Ri f f at er r e and t hei r l i ke,

and t hat what Bl oom i s doi ng i s a sear ch f or or i gi ns i n a si ngl e

pr ecur sor aut hor ( 108- 9) . Thi s i s anot her exampl e of what

happens when we make t he f ocus nar r ower : we under mi ne t he concept

of i nt er t ext ual i t y i t sel f , and make i t a vague sear ch f or

or i gi ns. We need t o use mul t i pl e st r at egi es of i nt er t ext ual

i nvest i gat i on, even t hough t hey may not l ead t o a synt hesi s,

accor di ng t o Cul l er ( 111) . I hope t hat my t heor et i cal f r amewor k

t hat I out l i ne l at er i n t hi s chapt er wi l l use mul t i pl e s t r at egi es

i n or der t o i nvest i gat e t he r el at i onshi p of Chr oni cl es and t he

Cyr opaedi a.

Ot her concept s

One concept t hat i s especi al l y per t i nent t o t he concer ns

her e wi t h t he i deal r ul er i s Mül l er ’ s concept of i nt er f i gur al i t y .

I n hi s ar t i c l e, he di scusses cases wher e char act er s or f i gur es

Page 15: Inter Text Uality

37

become i nt er t ext ual t hr ough a pl ay on t he name. However , t he

most i nt r i gui ng par t of hi s ar t i cl e deal s wi t h what he cal l ed “ an

ext r eme t ype, ” t he r e- use of a l i t er ar y f i gur e f r om one aut hor ’ s

wor k i nt o anot her ’ s. He poi nt s out t hat when an aut hor t akes

over anot her ’ s f i gur e, t he f i gur e i s adapt ed i nt o t he st r uct ur e

of t he new t ext , and i s put t o new uses ( 107) . One use i s

par ody, wher e t he f i gur e i n t he new t ext i s a par ody of t he

or i gi nal , whi ch under mi nes t he or i gi nal . He ar gues t hat i t i s

i mpor t ant t o r eal i ze t hat t he new f i gur e i s not a “ mer e

dupl i cat e” of t he or i gi nal , and t hat t her e i s a t ens i on cr eat ed

bet ween t he or i gi nal and t he new f i gur e ( 108- 9) . Ot her uses f or

i nt er f i gur al i t y i ncl ude sequel s ( ei t her wr i t t en by t he same

aut hor or by a di f f er ent one) , t ext s whi ch gr oup t oget her f i gur es

f r om a var i et y of pr e- t ext s, t ext s i n whi ch a char act er so

i dent i f i es wi t h a l i t er ar y f i gur e t hat he/ she l oses gr asp of

r eal i t y, and t ext s wi t hi n t ext s wher e f i gur es ar e r e- used.

However , t he most i mpor t ant use f or our pur poses her e i s par ody:

i t wi l l be possi bl e t o see some of t he f i gur es i n Chr oni cl es and

t he Cyr opaedi a as par odi es under mi ni ng t he or i gi nal char act er s.

John Fr ow t r i es t o t ake t he concept of i nt er t ext ual i t y

beyond t he s t udy of l i t er at ur e i nt o t he cul t ur al / soc i et al spher e,

and appl y i nt er t ext ual i t y t o soc i al s t r uct ur e. However , bef or e

he does so ( whi ch i s t he mai n poi nt of hi s ar t i c l e) , he def i nes

t en t heses wi t h r espect t o l i t er ar y i nt er t ext ual i t y, whi ch I

t hi nk ar e hel pf ul i n summar i zi ng t he var i ous concept s of

Page 16: Inter Text Uality

38

i nt er t ext ual i t y. By usi ng t he concept of i nt er t ext ual i t y we

under st and t hat : 1) t he t ext i s sel f - cont ai ned but di f f er ent i al

and hi st or i cal ; 2) t ext s ar e t r aces of ot her ness – t hey ar e

r epet i t i ons and t r ansf or mat i ons of ot her t ext s ; 3) t he absent

t ext s const r ai n t he t ext and ar e r epr esent ed by/ wi t hi n i t ; 4) t he

r epr esent at i on may be i mpl i c i t or expl i c i t ; 5) i nt er t ext ual

r ef er ence i mpl i es r ef er ence t o t he meani ngs st or ed i n a genr e; 6)

t he pr ocess of i nt er t ext ual i t y i n l i t er at ur e i s gover ned by t he

st r uct ur e of t he l i t er ar y syst em and t he aut hor i t y of t he canon;

7) t he t ext ’ s r el at i onshi p t o di scur s i ve aut hor i t y may not

r ef l ect aut hor i al i nt ent i on; 8) i dent i f y i ng an i nt er t ext i s an

i nt er pr et i ve act ; 9) i dent i f yi ng t he gener al genr e or i deol ogy of

t he sour ce- t ext i s mor e i mpor t ant t han i dent i f yi ng t he par t i cul ar

sour ce; and 10) i nt er t ext ual i t y i s di st i ngui shed f r om sour ce

cr i t i c i sm by i t s s t r ess on i nt er pr et at i on r at her t han mer e

i nf l uence or causal i t y ( 45- 46) .

When l ooki ng at what i nt er t ext ual t heor y has t o do wi t h

bi bl i cal s t udi es, Gar y Phi l l i ps has poi nt ed out t hat most

bi bl i cal schol ar s ar e act i vel y host i l e t o t he use of t heor y,

s i nce t hey t hi nk t hat t heor y obscur es t he t r ue t ask of t he

bi bl i cal exeget e, whi ch i s t o i nt er pr et t he t ext . Thi s l eads t o

bi bl i cal schol ar s gener al l y bei ng shut out of t he wi der debat es

i n l i t er ar y st udi es ( 79) . Phi l l i ps t hen devel ops a model of

i nt er t ext ual i t y based on Pei r ce’ s t r i adi c si gn, or unl i mi t ed

Page 17: Inter Text Uality

39

semi os i s , wher e t ext s f unct i on as i nt er pr et ant s t o ot her t ext s

( 83- 85) .

"Intertextuality" in ancient criticism

As I di scussed above, i nt er t ext ual i t y i s a concept

devel oped i n t he 20t h cent ur y. However , i n or der t o devel op f ul l y

t he hi st or i cal cont ext f or a s t udy of i nt er t ext ual i t y i n anci ent

l i t er at ur e, i n t hi s sect i on I wi l l di scuss concept s ak i n t o

i nt er t ext ual i t y i n anc i ent l i t er ar y cr i t i c i sm and t heor y. Thi s

di scussi on i s l i mi t ed t o Gr eek t ext s , wi t hout t he i ncl us i on of

mat er i al f r om t he Hebr ew- l anguage t r adi t i on, f or t wo r easons: 1)

t her e i s no t heor et i cal mat er i al on l i t er at ur e whi ch has sur vi ved

f r om t he pr e- r abbi ni c Hebr ew l anguage t r adi t i on, ei t her bi bl i cal

or ext r abi bl i cal ; 2) r abbi ni c mat er i al i s f ar out s i de t he t i me

f r ame whi ch I am usi ng.

Judi t h St i l l and Mi chael Wor t on suggest t hat t he concept of

mi mesi s i n Pl at o ( al ong wi t h ot her f eat ur es of hi s t hought ) mi ght

be seen as a pr ecur sor t o i nt er t ext ual i t y. They al so poi nt out

t hat t he f or m of t he Socr at i c di al ogue i s i nher ent l y i nt er t ext ual

( c f . Bakht i n, “ Epi c” 21- 25) . For t hem, Pl at o’ s phi l osophy i s

s i mi l ar t o Bakht i n’ s di al ogi sm ( whi ch wi l l be di scussed bel ow) ,

i n t hat bot h ar e “ ser i ous t r ut h seeki ng vi a a pl ur al i t y of voi ces

i n a speci f i c nar r at i ve cont ext and i n an i r oni c mode” ( 3) .

Al t hough we can see how Ar i s t ot l e devel oped hi s not i on of mi mesi s

Page 18: Inter Text Uality

40

f r om Pl at o ( Hal l i wel l 116- 23) , I woul d l i ke t o bypass t he

pur el y phi l osophi cal ar gument s i n or der t o f ocus on l i t er ar y

cr i t i c i sm. 3

Thr ee Gr eek t ext s deal i ng wi t h l i t er ar y cr i t i ci sm have

come down t o us i n some f or m f r om ant i qui t y: Ar i st ot l e’ s Poet i cs,

Longi nus’ On t he Subl i me, and Demet r i us’ On St yl e. Onl y

Ar i s t ot l e’ s wor k i s consi der ed t o be cor r ect l y at t r i but ed: bot h

On t he Subl i me and On St yl e ar e at t r i but ed convent i onal l y, but

i mpr oper l y . The Poet i cs dat es t o t he f our t h cent ur y BCE, t hus i t

i s r oughl y cont empor ar y wi t h t he Cyr opaedi a and Chr oni cl es. On

St yl e may be dat ed t o t he second cent ur y BCE ( see t he

i nt r oduct i on by I nnes) . On t he Subl i me may be dat ed t o t he f i r s t

cent ur y CE ( see t he i nt r oduct i on by Russel l ) .

Ar i s t ot l e: The Poet i cs

Ther e ar e t wo concept s i n t he Poet i cs t hat may l end

t hemsel ves t o a di scussi on of i nt er t ext ual i t y, al t hough nei t her

i s gi ven t hat sense exact l y: mi mesi s ( mi m ) and pl ot ( myt hos) .

Mi mesi s, i mi t at i on, has t wo senses i n t he Poet i cs, t he sense of

i mage- maki ng ( as i n a wor k of ar t ) and enact ment – t hi s i s t he

sense t hat Ar i st ot l e emphasi zed ( c f . Hal l i wel l 129- 31) ; i t i s one

of t he cor e concept s i n t he Poet i cs. 4 For Ar i s t ot l e, l i t er at ur e,

especi al l y t r agedy and epi c, was mi met i c . 5 Whet her we can expand

t hi s def i ni t i on of mi mesi s f r om t he i mi t at i on of f or ms t o i ncl ude

t he i mi t at i on of ear l i er wor ks of l i t er at ur e i s poss i bl e, but

i mpr obabl e i n Ar i s t ot l e’ s cont ext , s i nce t her e i s no expl i ci t

Page 19: Inter Text Uality

41

r ef er ence t o such r euse ot her t han i n t he mat t er of pl ot .

Ther e i s no r ef er ence t o r euse of f i gur es, t hemes, mot i f s,

l anguage et c . , whi ch we mi ght consi der hal l mar ks of

i nt er t ext ual i t y.

Pl ot , on t he ot her hand, i s somet hi ng t hat Ar i st ot l e deal t

wi t h mor e concr et el y . Whi l e deal i ng wi t h pl ot , Ar i s t ot l e made

ment i on of pl ot s whi ch ar e cr eat ed f r om t he aut hor ’ s i magi nat i on,

and pl ot s whi ch come f r om st or i es t hat ar e al r eady known. Wi t h

bot h t ypes, Ar i s t ot l e ar gued t hat t he aut hor shoul d use an

out l i ne, whi ch he t hen f i l l s i n wi t h epi sodes t hat advance t he

pl ot ( 55a34- 55b2) . Ar i s t ot l e saw no di f f er ence i n ef f ect bet ween

new and r e- used pl ot s, and i n f act s t at ed t hat t he aut hor need

not st i ck wi t h t he t r adi t i onal pl ot s but can f eel f r ee t o i nvent

hi s own ( 51b19- 25) . Then, he st at ed t hat “ even [ kai ] t he

f ami l i ar subj ect s ar e f ami l i ar onl y t o a mi nor i t y, yet

nonet hel ess pl ease ever yone” ( 51b25- 27) , whi ch suggest s ( al ong

wi t h t he r est of t hi s sect i on of ar gument ) t hat whi l e t he

expect ed t hi ng t o do i n hi s t i me was t o r e- use pl ot s , not

ever yone woul d be f ami l i ar wi t h t he ol d pl ot s, and woul d r ecei ve

t hem as i f t hey wer e new. St i l l and Wor t on have poi nt ed out t hat

Ar i s t ot l e’ s t hought i s associ at ed wi t h monol ogi sm i n Bakht i n’ s

wor k ( especi al l y i n “ Epi c” 5, 8) . However , t hey have al so

suggest ed t hat t he anci ent aut hor ’ s dr awi ng on a var i et y of

sour ces i mpl i es pol yphony ( 4) ; t o me, t hi s i s r eachi ng a bi t

f ur t her t han Ar i st ot l e’ s wor k r eal l y al l ows.

Page 20: Inter Text Uality

42

Al t hough Ar i st ot l e’ s ar gument s on pl ot out l i ned above

wer e or i gi nal l y meant t o appl y t o t r agedy and epi c ( he

speci f i cal l y separ at ed out hi s t or y f r om poet r y as a genr e i n

51a36- 51b8) , i t seems t o me t hat t hey mi ght be appl i ed t o ot her

anci ent l i t er ar y f or ms. I t i s c l ear , at any r at e, t hat t he use

and r e- use of pr ev i ous wor ks ( speci f i cal l y t he pl ot s of pr ev i ous

wor ks) was a known and accept ed phenomenon i n Ar i s t ot l e’ s day,

even t hough exact r el at i onshi ps per haps had not been t hought out .

“ Demet r i us” : On St yl e

The wor k of “ Demet r i us” deal s wi t h: 1) sent ence st r uct ur e;

and 2) t he Four St yl es of wr i t i ng/ or at or y. Under t he gr and st yl e

( megal opr ep ) , Demet r i us i nt r oduced t he concept of br i ngi ng

poet i c wor ds i nt o pr ose t ext s. He suggest ed t hat “ [ p] oet i c

vocabul ar y i n pr ose adds gr andeur [ …] ” but “ some wr i t er s i mi t at e

( mi m ) t he poet s qui t e cr udel y, or r at her , t hey do not i mi t at e

t hem but pl agi ar i se ( met at hesei ) t hem [ …] ” ( §112) . He cont r ast ed

Her odot us ( as a pl agi ar i st ) wi t h Thucydi des ( as a wr i t er of t he

gr and st yl e) , suggest i ng t hat Thucydi des di d not pl agi ar i ze, but

r at her used t he bor r owed vocabul ar y i n hi s own way and “ makes i t

hi s own pr oper t y” ( §113) . Thi s, t hen, suggest s t hat r euse of

wor ds i n a new cont ext was accept abl e i n Demet r i us ’ t i me, as

l ongs as t he wor ds f i t t he new cont ext and expr essed t he aut hor ’ s

message appr opr i at el y.

Page 21: Inter Text Uality

43

“ Longi nus” : On t he Subl i me

“ Longi nus” was concer ned wi t h t he expl i cat i on of t he

subl i me ( hypsos) i n l i t er at ur e, wher e t he subl i me i s seen as t r ue

gr eat ness t hat el evat es ( 7. 1- 4) . Accor di ng t o Longi nus, t her e

ar e many pat hs t o t he subl i me, one of whi ch i s t he “ [ z ] eal ous

i mi t at i on [ mi m ] of t he gr eat pr ose wr i t er s and poet s of t he

past , ” s i nce t he wr i t er s of t he past mi ght pr ovi de i nspi r at i on

f or t he cont empor ar y aut hor ( 13. 2) . He pr ov i ded exampl es of

“ Homer i c” aut hor s, i nc l udi ng Her odot us and especi al l y Pl at o

( 13. 3) . Thi s i mi t at i on of past wr i t er s he consi der ed especi al l y

appr opr i at e i n mat t er s of st yl e, and “ no t hef t ; i t i s r at her l i ke

t he r epr oduct i on of good char act er by scul pt ur es or ot her wor ks

of ar t ” ( 13. 4) . An aut hor or or at or , t hen, shoul d ask hi msel f

how pr ev i ous gr eat aut hor s and or at or s woul d have expr essed

somet hi ng; an aut hor shoul d ask hi msel f how t hat pr evi ous gr eat

aut hor woul d r espond t o hi s new wor k; and most i mpor t ant l y , an

aut hor shoul d ask hi msel f how post er i t y mi ght r ecei ve hi s wor k

( 14. 1- 3) . Di onysi us of Hal i car nassus seems al so t o have

subscr i bed t o t hi s t heor y; he sai d i n hi s Let t er t o Gnaeus

Pompei us t hat Xenophon model ed hi s wor k upon Her odot us ’ bot h i n

t er ms of subj ect and st y l e. Di onysi us especi al l y pr ai sed

Xenophon f or t he ar r angement of hi s mat er i al , t he pur i t y of hi s

vocabul ar y and t he char m of hi s wr i t i ng. However , Longi nus

suggest ed t hat whi l e Her odot us had subl i mi t y ( hypsos) , Xenophon

f el l shor t i n t hat r espect ( §4) . Ther ef or e, whi l e Ar i st ot l e was

Page 22: Inter Text Uality

44

concer ned wi t h t he r euse of pl ot s, and Demet r i us wi t h t he r euse

of vocabul ar y, her e we have a concer n wi t h t he r euse of st yl e;

agai n, i t was consi der ed hi ghl y appr opr i at e t o do so.

Intertextuality as dialogue 6

I n t hi s sect i on, I wi l l t ur n t o a di scussi on of t he

t heor i es of t ext ual i t y put f or war d by Bakht i n and Lot man. I t i s

pr i mar i l y upon t he wor k of t hese t wo schol ar s t hat I wi l l be

bui l di ng my t heor et i cal f r amewor k i n t he next sect i on. I n t hi s

sect i on, I wi l l al so be ar gui ng mor e di r ect l y f or t he appl i cat i on

of t hese 20t h cent ur y t heor i es t o anc i ent t ext s. I hope t o show

t hat i t i s not unr easonabl e, gi ven what pr esent ed above i n t he

sect i on on anci ent l i t er ar y cr i t i c i sm, t o devel op f r om t hese

moder n schol ar s a t heor y f or anc i ent t ext s .

Mi khai l Bakht i n

Bakht i n’ s wor k i s r i ch and var i ed, and f or t he pur poses of

t hi s di sser t at i on, I wi l l l i mi t mysel f t o dr awi ng on hi s wor k on

di al ogi sm and het er ogl ossi a. 7 Di al ogi sm i s def i ned pr i mar i l y i n

one of Bakht i n’ s ear l y wor ks, Pr obl ems of Dost oevsky ’ s Poet i cs.

Ther e he exami nes di al ogi sm i n t er ms of l i ngui st i cs, or mor e

pr ec i sel y, i n t er ms of met al i ngui s t i cs, whi ch he def i nes as

“ t hose aspect s i n t he l i f e of t he wor d [ …] t hat exceed – and

compl et el y l egi t i mat el y – t he boundar i es of l i ngui st i cs” ( 181) .

Di al ogi c r el at i onshi ps, f or Bakht i n, ar e out si de of pur el y

l i ngui st i c s t udy, t hat i s, ar e a mat t er f or met al i ngui st i cs

Page 23: Inter Text Uality

45

( 183) . For Bakht i n, t he wor d and t he i dea ar e by nat ur e

di al ogi c ; t he wor d and t he i dea want “ t o be hear d, under st ood and

‘ answer ed’ by ot her voi ces f r om ot her posi t i ons” ( Pr obl ems 88) .

The wor d and i dea ar e al so “ i nt er - i ndi vi dual and i nt er - subj ect i ve

– t he r eal m of i t s exi st ence i s not i ndi vi dual consci ousness, but

di al ogi c communi on bet ween consci ousnesses” ( Pr obl ems 88) .

However , t hi s r at her abst r act i dea of di al ogi sm can onl y be made

concr et e t hr ough l i ngui s t i c f or mul ae such as synt ax and semant i cs

- di al ogi c r el at i onshi ps ar e “ i mpossi bl e wi t hout l ogi cal

r el at i onshi ps or r el at i onshi ps or i ent ed t owar d a r ef er ent i al

obj ect ” ( Pr obl ems 184) . Di al ogi c r el at i onshi ps t hus cannot ex i st

i n t he abst r act ; t hey must become concr et e t hr ough t he ut t er ances

of t he aut hor . The aut hor uses hi s/ her ut t er ances t o expr ess a

posi t i on, t o whi ch ot her ut t er ances r espond ( Pr obl ems 184) .

Mi chael Hol qui st has poi nt ed out t hat t he r ecept i on of Bakht i n i n

t he West has f ocused on a j oyf ul , hopef ul and open di al ogi sm, but

al t hough t hose aspect s exi st i n Bakht i n’ s wor k, t her e ar e al so

dar ker , mor e s i ni s t er , aspect s t o di al ogi sm ( 181) .

Davi d Shepher d has suggest ed t hat Bakht i n had a st r ong

not i on of t he aut hor ’ s aut hor i t y over t he t ext ( 95) ; t hi s

separ at es Bakht i n f r om t he t heor i s t s ( Kr i s t eva, Bar t hes) , who

f ol l ow hi s wor k, but who posi t t he “ deat h of t he aut hor . ”

However , Shepher d al so ar gues t hat i n Bakht i n’ s wor k t her e i s a

st r ong f ocus on t he hi st or i cal and soci al si t uat i on of r eader s,

so t hat “ t he di al ogi c act of r eadi ng i s di sr upt i ve of t he

Page 24: Inter Text Uality

46

seemi ngl y f i xed posi t i ons of t ext and r eader ” ( 99) . Thi s

suggest s t hat al t hough Bakht i n had i deas about aut hor i al

aut hor i t y, t he ver y not i on of di al ogi sm br eaks down t hi s

concept . 8

Ken Hi r schkop asks i f t he not i on of di al ogi sm i s “ f or

r eal . ” He suggest s t hat we have been eager t o embr ace t he

concept of di al ogi sm because t he concept of di al ogue i s ver y

i mpor t ant i n a l i ber al democr acy. The poi nt of hi s essay i s t o

show t hat t her e i s a di f f er ence bet ween di al ogue and novel , and

t hus t her e i s a di f f er ence bet ween di al ogue and di al ogi sm: t hey

ar e not t he same t hi ngs ( 183- 84) . By doi ng so, Hi r schkop woul d

seem t o be cont r adi c t i ng t hose who see t he or i gi ns of di al ogi sm

( and hence i nt er t ext ual i t y ) i n such t hi ngs as t he Socr at i c

di al ogues, and t hose who see di al ogi sm i n mi dr ashi c exegesi s . He

poi nt s out t hat i n a di al ogi c novel , al l of t he speech posi t i ons

have t o be r epr esent ed by a si ngl e aut hor , t hus t he openness of

t r ue di al ogue i s not pr esent ( 189) . What di al ogi sm does do i s

br i ng i n “ ever yday” speech- t ypes i nt o t he novel , “ endow[ i ng] so-

cal l ed popul ar or ever yday l anguage wi t h an hi st or i cal or soci al

s i gni f i cance i t l acks i n i t s ever yday cont ext ” ( 190) . He ar gues

t hat al t hough Bakht i n t r i ed t o ext end di al ogue wi t h t he concept

of di al ogi sm, i n f act he showed t he l i mi t at i ons of di al ogue by

showi ng al l t hat novel s can achi eve wi t hout bei ng di al ogues.

Di al ogi sm i s not t he be- al l and end- al l , but r at her one f or m of

r epr esent at i on i n di scour se ( 192- 93, 195) . Thi s i s an i mpor t ant

Page 25: Inter Text Uality

47

cor r ect i ve, I t hi nk, t o an over - ent husi asm t o make al l t hi ngs

di al ogi c , whi l e st i l l showi ng t hat di al ogi sm i s a meani ngf ul

concept .

Bakht i n devel oped hi s t heor i es about di al ogi sm based on

Dost oevsky ’ s novel s. As I not ed above, we mi ght wonder about t he

val i di t y of us i ng t heor i es based on 19t h cent ur y novel s on

c l assi cal and bi bl i cal l i t er at ur e. I n t hi s chapt er , I wi l l ar gue

t hat Bakht i n ant i c i pat ed t hat hi s t heor i es about di al ogi sm coul d

have wi der appl i cat i ons beyond t he novel s of t hi s one par t i cul ar

aut hor . I ndeed, i n hi s l at er wor ks he expands di al ogi sm t o

i ncl ude al l novel s , i n hi s essay “ Di scour se i n t he Novel . ”

Towar ds t he end of hi s l i f e, he deal t wi t h t he even wi der

i mpl i cat i ons of di al ogi sm i n hi s essay “ The Pr obl em of t he Text , ”

wher e he descr i bes di al ogi sm as,

Conf i dence i n anot her ’ s wor d, r ever ent i al r ecept i on

[ …] , appr ent i ceshi p, t he sear ch f or and mandat or y

nat ur e of deep meani ng, agr eement , i t s i nf i ni t e

gr adat i ons and shadi ngs [ …] , t he l ayer i ng of meani ng

upon meani ng, voi ce upon voi ce, st r engt heni ng t hr ough

mer gi ng, t he combi nat i on of many voi ces [ …] t hat

augment s under st andi ng, depar t ur e beyond t he l i mi t s of

t he under st ood [ …] . ( 121)

I f we t ake Bakht i n’ s t hought s on t he subj ect as t hey devel oped,

we coul d ar gue t hat di al ogi sm coul d be appl i ed t o al most any

l i t er ar y t ext . However , even i n Pr obl ems of Dost oevsky’ s

Page 26: Inter Text Uality

48

Poet i cs, he begi ns t o gener al i ze hi s speci al i zed t heor y i n ways

t hat can be speci f i cal l y appl i ed t o t he Bi bl e; he not es i n hi s

di scussi on of t he di al ogi c t hat ,

[ T] he f or ms of t hi s r eal aut hor shi p can be ver y

di ver se. A gi ven wor k can be t he pr oduct of a

col l ect i ve ef f or t , i t can be cr eat ed by t he successi ve

ef f or t s of gener at i ons, and so f or t h – but i n al l

cases we hear i n i t a uni f i ed cr eat i ve wi l l , a

def i ni t e pos i t i on t o whi ch i t i s poss i bl e t o r eact

di al ogi cal l y . ( 184)

What wor k does t hi s descr i be i f not t he Bi bl e as a whol e or i t s

component books l i ke Chr oni c l es? For Bakht i n, t hen, t he i ns and

out s of t he composi t i on of t he ut t er ance ( t he book) woul d not

mat t er , si nce t he r esul t i s one speci f i c pos i t i on. Thi s way of

exami ni ng a composi t e t ext l i ke t he Bi bl e as a whol e or

Chr oni cl es mor e speci f i cal l y can be ver y l i ber at i ng; no l onger i s

t he i nt er pr et er bound t o exami ne each bl ock of t ext as det er mi ned

by hi s t or i cal - cr i t i cal schol ar shi p. As l ong as we agr ee t hat t he

basi c i nt ent and message per vades t he ent i r e wor k, we can exami ne

t he ent i r e wor k as one l i t er ar y posi t i on. 9

Di al ogi c r el at i onshi ps can oper at e on t he mi cr o l evel of

i ndi vi dual wor ds or speeches wi t hi n a wor k ( whi ch Bakht i n

descr i bes as het er ogl oss i a, see bel ow) , or t hey can oper at e on

t he macr o l evel of r el at i onshi ps bet ween ent i r e wor ks, as l ong as

we can hear t wo voi ces oper at i ng. Accor di ng t o Bakht i n, t her e

Page 27: Inter Text Uality

49

can even be di al ogi c r el at i onshi ps wi t hi n one aut hor ’ s t ext , i f

t he aut hor shi p i s di vi ded i nt o t wo i nner voi ces. Fi nal l y,

Bakht i n poi nt s out t hat di al ogi c r el at i onshi ps ar e possi bl e even

bet ween wor ks i n di ssi mi l ar medi a, as l ong as t her e i s some ki nd

of semi ot i c expr essi on ( Pr obl ems 184- 185) .

Het er ogl ossi a i n Bakht i n i s def i ned as t he var i et y of

speech t ypes t hat make up t he novel . Thi s i s how di al ogi c

r el at i onshi ps ( i . e. di f f er ent posi t i ons) can ent er t he novel

i t sel f , t hr ough t he di f f er ences i n aut hor i al and nar r at or i al

speech, t he speech of char act er s, i nser t ed genr es, and so on.

The novel i s i nher ent l y a di al ogi c f or m ( “ Di scour se” 263) . 10

Agai n, what do we have i n t he Bi bl e, and mor e speci f i cal l y , i n

Chr oni cl es, i f not het er ogl ossi a? Chr oni c l es cont ai ns many ki nds

of speech, some of whi ch over l ap: t he Chr oni cl er ’ s speech, t he

nar r at or ’ s speech, t he speeches of t he var i ous char act er s, and

t he i nser t ed sect i ons t hat par al l el t he aut onomous wor k of

Samuel - Ki ngs. Wi t h such a var i et y of speech t ypes, Chr oni cl es

must be i nher ent l y di al ogi c: t her e must be a var i et y of wor ds and

i deas want i ng answer s f r om ot her pos i t i ons. However , we coul d

ar gue t hat al l of t hese speech t ypes ar e adapt ed i nt o t he

Chr oni cl er ’ s speech pl an and t hat t her ef or e t her e woul d be t i ght

aut hor i al cont r ol over t he het er ogl ossi a ( cf . Bakht i n, “ Speech

Genr es” ) .

But ar e Chr oni cl es and t he Cyr opaedi a novel s? I f we t ake

Bakht i n’ s descr i pt i on of t he novel i n hi s essay “ Epi c and Novel , ”

Page 28: Inter Text Uality

50

t hen Chr oni c l es and t he Cyr opaedi a i n some sense do appear t o

be novel s. For Bakht i n, t he novel i s di st i ngui shed by t hr ee

char act er i st i cs: 1) i t s st yl i s t i c t hr ee di mensi onal i t y ( i . e. ,

di al ogi sm) ; 2) i t s abi l i t y t o change t he t empor al i t y of t he

“ l i t er ar y i mage” ( i . e. , t al k i ng about t he past as t he past and

not as some cont i nuous “ now” ) ; and 3) i t s abi l i t y t o make t he

past cont act t he pr esent ( i . e. , al t hough t he past i s depi c t ed,

t he st ar t i ng poi nt and concer ns come f r om t he pr esent ) . The

novel t akes t he f or m of di al ogues f r amed by a st or y, whi ch i s

al so di al ogi zed ( “ Epi c” 11- 30) . Chr oni c l es has het er ogl ossi a and

di al ogi c r el at i onshi ps by vi r t ue of i t s var i et y of speech t ypes.

I t descr i bes t he t i me of t he k i ngs as t he def i nabl e past , not i n

t er ms of some “ once upon a t i me” past ; and i t s cont empor ar y

concer ns f or t empl e, I sr ael and Davi di c ki ng ar e depi c t ed i n

t er ms of t he past . Al t hough i n Chr oni cl es t he f r ami ng st or y

seems t o t ake pr ecedence over t he speeches of t he char act er s, t he

basi c f or m of Bakht i n’ s novel pr evai l s. Chr oni c l es can i ndeed be

seen as an ear l y novel or a pr ot o- novel . The Cyr opaedi a al so has

a var i et y of speech t ypes; i t descr i bes t he t i me of Cyr us as t he

def i nabl e past ; and i t s cont empor ar y concer ns f or pr oper r ul er s

and a phi l osophy of r ul i ng ar e depi c t ed i n t er ms of t he past .

The Cyr opaedi a al so has a good number of speeches, so t hat t her e

i s mor e of t he novel i s t i c f or m of di al ogues f r amed by a st or y

t han i n Chr oni cl es. Now, Bakht i n i mpl i ed t hat t he Bi bl e as a

whol e was par t of t he epi c t r adi t i on r at her t han t he novel i s t i c,

Page 29: Inter Text Uality

51

a cl ai m t hat I accept wi t h some r eser vat i ons. However ,

Chr oni cl es i s not l i ke most of t he r est of t he Bi bl e: i t i s not a

pr ose epi c ( as we mi ght descr i be Genesi s t hr ough 2 Ki ngs) . I n

t he same way, Est her , Rut h and Dani el ar e not pr ose epi cs but

wel l - cr af t ed s t or i es expr ess i ng cont empor ar y concer ns.

Concer ni ng t he Cyr opaedi a, Bakht i n hi msel f consi der ed i t an ear l y

f or m of t he novel , say i ng, “ Cyr opaedi a i s a novel , i n t he most

basi c sense of t he wor d” ( “ Epi c” 29) . 11 Ther ef or e, i f we can

accept Chr oni c l es as bei ng some ki nd of ear l y exempl ar of t he

novel as wel l , t hen we have t aken t he f i r s t st ep t owar ds

accept i ng and under st andi ng t he di al ogi c and het er ogl oss i c

r el at i onshi ps of bot h Chr oni cl es and t he Cyr opaedi a.

However , t her e i s a l i ne of t hought t hat suggest s Bakht i n’ s

under st andi ng of t he novel i s t i c genr e was f l awed. R. B. Br anham

ar gues t hat t he Gr eek r omances/ novel s ar e not novel i st i c

accor di ng t o Bakht i n’ s own cr i t er i a; he suggest s t hat t he Gr eek

novel was “ a moder ni zed ver s i on of t he ‘ absol ut e past ’ of epi c”

( 84) . The Gr eek novel , t hen, accor di ng t o t hi s vi ew, i s a br i dge

bet ween t he epi c and t he t r ue novel t hat devel oped i n Lat i n

l i t er at ur e ( t he wor ks of Pet r oni us ar e gi ven as an exampl e) .

Br anham suggest s t hat t hi s r ef i nement or r ef or mul at i on of Bakht i n

“ woul d r equi r e us t o hi s t or i ci ze hi s t heor y of t he novel ’ s

or i gi ns [ …] ” ( 87) . I f we accept Br anham’ s v i ew, t hen Chr oni cl es

and t he Cyr opaedi a can st i l l be seen as pr ecur sor s t o t he novel ,

but at a much ear l i er st age i n novel i st i c devel opment , and

Page 30: Inter Text Uality

52

wi t hout al l of t he f eat ur es of t he t r ue het er ogl ossi c novel .

Hol qui st , however , poi nt ed out t hat Bakht i n made a di s t i nct i on

bet ween t he novel and novel ness: t he f or mer has i t s hi st or y i n

l i t er ar y hi s t or y , and t he l at t er has i t s hi s t or y i n t he hi st or y

of human consci ousness ( 72- 73) .

Yur i Lot man

Now I woul d l i ke t o t ur n away f r om Bakht i n t owar ds t he wor k

of Lot man. Lot man cer t ai nl y knew Bakht i n’ s wor k, and i n many

pl aces bui l t hi s own upon i t . Bot h Al l an Rei d and Davi d Bet hea

have di scussed Lot man’ s r el at i onshi p t o Bakht i n’ s wor k. Rei d

poi nt s out t hat i t appear s t hat i n t he mi d- 1970s Lot man

di scover ed and f ami l i ar i zed hi msel f wi t h t he wor k of Bakht i n. At

t hi s poi nt Lot man began t o move away f r om a st at i s t i cal - semi ot i c

appr oach t o t ext s and t o move t owar ds a devel opment of Bakht i n’ s

posi t i ons ( Li t er at ur e 36- 37) . 12 Bet hea suggest s t hat al t hough

Lot man l ear ned f r om Bakht i n’ s wor k and devel oped hi s own l at er

wor k usi ng Bakht i n’ s ar gument s, 13 he r emai ned “ ver y much hi s own

t hi nker . ” He suggest s t hat Lot man coul d be seen as a t heor i st of

poet r y whi l e Bakht i n was a t heor i s t of t he novel . Lot man was

i nt er est ed i n poet i c t hi nk i ng whi l e Bakht i n was i nt er est ed i n

pr osai cs; Lot man came t o see “ [ t ] he connect i on bet ween l i f e and

ar t , t ext and code [ …] [ as] gener at i ve of meani ng – t he ul t i mat e

semi ot i c gest ur e” ( 2) . Bet hea di scusses how Lot man was abl e t o

use t he “ openness” of Bakht i ni an t hought i n or der t o open up hi s

own cl osed semi ot i c syst ems, t hus showi ng how Bakht i n coul d have

Page 31: Inter Text Uality

53

used Lot man’ s under st andi ng of t ext and code t o “ t i ght en up”

hi s t hi nki ng ( 4- 5) . 14 Al t hough much of Lot man’ s wor k has not been

t r ansl at ed, some of i t has, and I wi l l be dr awi ng upon some of

t hi s i n or der t o r ef i ne and expand Bakht i n’ s concept s of

di al ogi sm and het er ogl ossi a.

Among ot her t hi ngs, Lot man was i nt er est ed i n t ext ual i t y;

t hat i s, t he f or m and f unct i on of t ext s. I n one wor k, he def i nes

t he t ext ’ s f unct i ons as t r ansmi ssi on and gener at i on: t he

t r ansmi ssi on of t he message and t he gener at i on of new messages.

I n or der f or t he message t o be t r ansmi t t ed per f ect l y , bot h t he

aut hor and audi ence have t o have whol l y i dent i cal semi ot i c codes,

whi ch Lot man c l ai ms i s al most i mpossi bl e. That gap bet ween t he

t r ansmi ssi bl e and t he i nt r ansmi ssi bl e i s what al l ows t he t ext t o

cr eat e or gener at e new meani ngs ( “ Text ” 377- 384) . I n hi s l at er

wor k, he adds a t hi r d f unct i on, memor y, whi ch he descr i bes as t he

t ext ’ s abi l i t y t o condense cul t ur al memor y and t o be i nt er pr et ed

- t he t ext acqui r es new meani ngs t hr ough t he hi s t or y of

i nt er pr et at i on ( Uni ver se 18) .

Lot man br i ngs t he audi ence of t he t ext much mor e t o t he

f or ef r ont : he cl ai ms t hat “ as a gener at or of meani ng [ …] t he t ext

needs an i nt er l ocut or ” ( “ Text ” 378; c f . Bakht i n, “ Speech Genr es”

94) . Thi s i nt er l ocut or coul d be an audi ence or a consci ousness

or anot her t ext . When t he addr esser sends a message t o t he

addr essee15 i n a subj ect - obj ect t r ansmi ssi on, what Lot man cal l s an

“ I - S/ he” t r ansmi ss i on, t he message i s t r ansmi t t ed i n space

Page 32: Inter Text Uality

54

( Uni ver se 20- 21) . However , when t he addr esser sends a message

t o t he addr essee i n a subj ect - subj ect t r ansmi ssi on, what Lot man

cal l san “ I - I ” t r ansmi ssi on, t he message i s t r ansmi t t ed not i n

space but i n t i me. Lot man cal l s t hi s “ aut ocommuni cat i on”

( Uni ver se 21) . 16 I n I - S/ he t r ansmi ssi on, t he message i s s t at i c,

but i n I - I t r ansmi ss i on, t he message i s dynami c: i t acqui r es new

meani ngs i n t he communi cat i on pr ocess. The or i gi nal message i s

suppl ement ed or has a new meani ng i mposed upon i t , or t he meani ng

of t he message i s t r ansf or med ( Uni ver se 22) . However , even i n

aut ocommuni cat i on t her e i s an audi ence, t he new subj ect , f or t he

message.

Not onl y does Lot man pr esuppose an audi ence f or t he t ext ,

he ar gues t hat t he audi ence and t ext i nt er act . For hi m, not onl y

does t he t ext have an i dea of i t s own i deal r eader shi p, but al so

t he r eader shi p has an i dea of i t s own i deal t ext . The t ext and

audi ence must shar e an i nt er pr et i ve code ( Uni ver se 63- 64) . The

r el at i onshi p bet ween t he t ext and audi ence i s not a pass i ve one

( r ecept i on of t he t ext by t he audi ence) , but r at her i s di al ogi c;

“ [ d] i al ogi c speech i s di st i ngui shed not onl y by t he common code

of t wo j uxt aposed ut t er ances, but al so by t he pr esence of a

common memor y shar ed by addr esser and addr essee” ( “ Text and t he

St r uct ur e” 81) . Tr adi t i on i s of t en one of t he i nt er pr et i ve

codes. Lot man def i nes t r adi t i on as a syst em of t ext s i n t he

cul t ur al memor y; any t ext i s f i l t er ed t hr ough t he code of

t r adi t i on, t hat i s , t hr ough ot her t ext s t hat ser ve as

Page 33: Inter Text Uality

55

i nt er pr et er s ( Uni ver se 70- 71) . However , of t en an audi ence wi l l

change, and t hi s wi l l f or ce a change i n t he way t he t ext

const r uct s i t s i deal r eader shi p: t ext shapes r eader shapes t ext .

The r el evance of t he f or egoi ng t o t he r el at i onshi p bet ween

Samuel - Ki ngs and Chr oni c l es i s , I hope, cl ear . When Samuel - Ki ngs

and i t s audi ence or a por t i on of i t no l onger suf f i c i ent l y shar ed

an i nt er pr et i ve code, such as t r adi t i on, t hen t he audi ence

r eshaped i t s t ext and i n ef f ect gener at ed a new one, Chr oni c l es.

Chr oni cl es was t he r esul t of aut ocommuni cat i on, a message sent

t hr ough t i me t o i t s addr essee, t he new wr i t i ng subj ect . The

Cyr opaedi a al so can be seen as t he r esul t of aut ocommuni cat i on,

wher e t he new t ext had a di f f er ent pur pose t han t he t ext s of

Her odot us and Ct es i as, and hence a di f f er ent audi ence.

Fi nal l y, Lot man al so deal s wi t h one of t he pr obl ems of

Chr oni cl es: t he t ext wi t hi n t he t ext ; hi s t hought on t hi s pr obl em

devel oped t hr ough t i me. I n hi s ear l i er wor k, “ Pr obl ems i n t he

Typol ogy of Text s, ” Lot man poi nt s out t hat t he t ext wi t hi n t he

t ext acqui r es an ar t i s t i c f unct i on even t hough i t may have

or i gi nal l y bel onged t o anot her t ypol ogi cal syst em ( e. g. , l egal ) ;

i t i s r ei nt er pr et ed ( 120) . Even i n t hi s ear l i er ( pr e-

Bakht i ni an?) wor k, Lot man seems t o have been l ooki ng at t he

pr obl em f r om a di al ogi c per spect i ve. Lat er , i n The St r uct ur e of

t he Ar t i st i c Text , he di scusses t ext ual boundar i es and r emar ks

t hat t r ansf er r i ng a t ext ual f eat ur e t o anot her t ext “ i s one of

Page 34: Inter Text Uality

56

t he essent i al met hods f or f or mi ng new meani ngs” ( 52) . I n hi s

l at er essay, “ The Text Wi t hi n t he Text , ” he not es t hat ,

The i nt r oduct i on of an ext er nal t ext i nt o t he i mmanent

wor l d has f ar - r eachi ng consequences. The ext er nal

t ext i s t r ansf or med i n t he s t r uct ur al f i el d of t he

ot her t ext ’ s meani ng, and a new message i s cr eat ed.

( “ Text ” 378; c f . Bakht i n, “ Speech Genr es” 62)

Thi s i s sel f - evi dent ; i n t he t er ms of t he Samuel - Ki ngs- Chr oni c l es

r el at i onshi p, when a sour ce t ext f r om Samuel - Ki ngs i s i nt r oduced

i nt o Chr oni c l es, t hat sour ce t ext i s t r ansf or med by t he t ext of

Chr oni cl es. What Lot man goes on t o say i s t hat “ t he

t r ansf or mat i on occur s not onl y wi t hi n t he ent er i ng t ext ; t he

ent i r e semi ot i c si t uat i on i nsi de t he ot her t ext i s al so changed”

( “ Text ” 379) . I n t er ms of Samuel - Ki ngs- Chr oni cl es, not onl y i s

t he sour ce t ext f r om Samuel - Ki ngs t r ansf or med, but t he meani ng of

t he t ext of Chr oni cl es i s al so changed. Thi s st at ement was

ant i ci pat ed by Vol oš i nov/ Bakht i n i n Mar x i sm and t he Phi l osophy of

Language wher e i t i s ar gued ( i n t he l anguage of Lot man) t hat t he

ot her t ext ( Chr oni cl es) t r i es t o br eak down t he ext er nal t ext

( Samuel - Ki ngs) , t o obl i t er at e i t s boundar i es, whi l e t he ext er nal

t ext ( Samuel - Ki ngs) t r i es t o over come t he ot her t ext ( Chr oni cl es)

( 120- 121; cf . Bakht i n, “ Speech Genr es” 92) . 17 Ther ef or e, bot h t he

synopt i c por t i ons of Samuel - Ki ngs- Chr oni cl es and t he sur r oundi ng

t ext of Chr oni cl es ar e changed i n meani ng by t hei r i nt er act i on.

Chr oni cl es cr eat es new i nf or mat i on by t he i nt er act i on of i t s

Page 35: Inter Text Uality

57

synopt i c and non- synopt i c por t i ons. Because t he Cyr opaedi a

does not have t ext - wi t hi n- a- t ext , as does Chr oni cl es, i t i s mor e

di f f i cul t t o use t hi s por t i on of Lot man’ s wor k when deal i ng wi t h

i t .

Outline of the theoretical framework

I f we br i ng t oget her t he wor k by Bakht i n and Lot man t hat I

have pr esent ed, i t i s al l l eadi ng t owar ds t he t er m whi ch so f ar I

have del i ber at el y avoi ded i n my di scussi on of t he wor k of Bakht i n

and Lot man: i nt er t ext ual i t y. Bakht i n never used t hi s t er m. The

cl osest he came t o i t was i n t he essay " The Pr obl em of t he Text , "

wher e he descr i bes t he t ext as “ a uni que monad t hat i n i t sel f

r ef l ect s al l t ext s … of a gi ven spher e. The i nt er connect i on of

al l i deas ( s i nce al l ar e r eal i zed i n ut t er ances) . The di al ogi c

r el at i onshi ps among t ext s and wi t hi n t he t ext ” ( “ Pr obl em of t he

Text ” 105) . I n t hi s sect i on, I wi l l out l i ne my model of a

di al ogi c i nt er t ext ual i t y , whi ch I wi l l use f or t he anal ysi s of

t he t ext s of Chr oni c l es and t he Cyr opaedi a.

I n t he chapt er s t hat f ol l ow, I wi l l be usi ng a t heor et i cal

f r amewor k devel oped f r om t he above sect i on, i . e. , i nt er t ext ual i t y

as di al ogue, but I wi l l al so make use of t he i ns i ght s of t he

ot her aut hor s I di scussed whi l e di scussi ng t he concept s of

i nt er t ext ual i t y. I n t hi s di sser t at i on i nt er t ext ual i t y wi l l be

def i ned as: t he i nt er r el at i onshi p of t ext s , i ncl udi ng, but not

l i mi t ed t o, t he absor pt i on, r ewr i t i ng, r euse and di al ogue of t ext

Page 36: Inter Text Uality

58

wi t h t ext . The t ext i s t he wor k whi ch absor bs, r ewr i t es or

r euses; t he i nt er t ext i s t he wor k whi ch i s absor bed, r ewr i t t en or

r eused – i n Lot man’ s t er ms, t he t ext wi t hi n t he t ext , i n

Ri f f at er r e’ s t er ms, t he t ext ( s) sel ect ed as r ef er ent ( s) by t he

t ext . Kr i st eva’ s not i on t hat t he t ext absor bs and dest r oys t he

i nt er t ext i s ext r emel y i mpor t ant : i t i s t he f i r s t st ep t o seei ng

t he t ext and i nt er t ext i n a di al ogi c r el at i onshi p. However ,

r at her t han seei ng i nt er t ext ual i t y as a f r ee- f l owi ng web ( l i ke

Kr i st eva and Bar t hes) , I see i nt er t ext ual i t y as a st r uct ur ed

net wor k connect i ng t ext s and i nt er t ext s whi ch ar e al r eady

associ at ed ( l i ke Ri f f at er r e) . Bar t hes’ i dea of l ook i ng at t he

sel f - cont ai ned t ext al l ows us t o put asi de t he t ext ’ s cont ext f or

a moment i n or der t o f ocus on t he t ext i t sel f ; Lot man’ s wor k

r emi nds us t hat we need t o keep t he cont ext al ways i n mi nd. Wi t h

Cul l er , I see t he pur pose of t he s t udy of i nt er t ext ual i t y t o be

most acut e i n t he st udy of genr e: by l ooki ng at t he t ext ual

i nt er r el at i onshi ps, we can see t ext ual commonal t i es. Mül l er ’ s

concept of i nt er f i gur al i t y i s hel pf ul when we consi der t hat i n

t hi s di sser t at i on I wi l l be exami ni ng t he f i gur e of t he i deal

r ul er t hat i s r eused f r om i nt er t ext t o t ext . Especi al l y hel pf ul

i s t he r eal i zat i on t hat t her e i s a t ensi on cr eat ed bet ween t he

or i gi nal and t he new f i gur e, not abl y a par odi c r el at i onshi p.

When we br i ng i n t he wor k of Bakht i n and Lot man, we br i ng

i n t he i dea of di al ogi sm and i t s r ef i nement s. Di al ogi sm i nvol ves

t he r el at i onshi ps bet ween ut t er ances, whet her i nsi de or bet ween

Page 37: Inter Text Uality

59

t ext s. The wor d or i dea i n an ut t er ance i s a posi t i on, whi ch

can be answer ed by ot her ut t er ances. Speeches and i nser t ed t ext s

ar e i n a di al ogi c r el at i onshi p wi t h t he sur r oundi ng t ext , and

mut ual l y shape each ot her and change each ot her ’ s meani ng. The

ut t er ance as an ent i r e t ext accept s speeches and i nser t ed t ext s

i nt o t he speech pl an, whi ch t he t ext al r eady has. As wel l , when

t he ut t er ance i s an ent i r e t ext , t hat t ext t r ansmi t s i t s message

not onl y t hr ough space but al so t hr ough t i me. The audi ence of

t he t ext r ecei ves t he t r ansmi ssi on and gener at es new meani ngs so

t hat t ext and r eader s mut ual l y shape each ot her , j ust as

ut t er ances or t ext s mut ual l y shape each ot her . When we add t hi s

t o t he i deas f r om Kr i s t eva, Ri f f at er r e, Bar t hes, Cul l er and

Mül l er , we have devel oped a concept of di al ogi c i nt er t ext ual i t y

t hat t akes i nt o consi der at i on t he movement of t ext s and f i gur es

t hr ough space, t i me, and di scour se. When I anal yze t he t ext s, I

wi l l be put t i ng as i de t he cont ext dur i ng t he anal ysi s, but t he

cont ext wi l l t hen be br ought back i nt o t he di scuss i on when I

di scuss t he i mpl i cat i ons of t he anal ysi s i n my concl us i ons.

Genre, and the genre of the texts

Ul t i mat el y , a l ot of what I am goi ng t o say about bot h t he

Cyr opaedi a and Chr oni c l es has t o do wi t h genr e. I n t hi s sect i on,

I wi l l br i ef l y out l i ne my pr esupposi t i ons about genr e i n gener al

and t he genr es of f i ct i on, hi s t or i ogr aphy and ( pol i t i cal )

phi l osophy i n par t i cul ar , t hen I wi l l l ook at t he genr e of

Page 38: Inter Text Uality

60

Chr oni cl es and t he Cyr opaedi a. Her e I am i nt er est ed i n l ook i ng

at how schol ar s have seen t hese t ext s : how have t hey seen t he

genr e, t he mai n t heme( s) , t he i deol ogy, t he f unct i on, and t he

pur pose of t hese t ext s . Thi s i s i mpor t ant because ul t i mat el y t he

i nt er t ext ual const r uct i on of t he i deal r ul er has i mpl i cat i ons f or

how we under st and t he nat ur e and pur pose of t hese t ext s; as

Cul l er s t at es ( above) , an i mpor t ant use f or i nt er t ext ual i t y i s

t he st udy of genr e. I wi l l begi n wi t h t he Cyr opaedi a, as t her e

i s l ess cont ent i on over i t s pur pose, and t hen I wi l l t ur n t o

schol ar shi p on Chr oni c l es.

Genr e

The i ssue of genr e i s compl i cat ed, because i t i s so

nebul ous a t er m. The i dea of genr e i s as ol d as t hi nk i ng about

l i t er at ur e: Ar i s t ot l e began t he Poet i cs by s t at i ng t hat he want ed

t o consi der poet r y ( poi ) i n gener al and i t s genr es ( ei dos)

( 47a1) . Her e, I wi l l be br i ef l y set t i ng out t he Bakht i ni an

under st andi ng of genr e t hat I wi l l be assumi ng i n my i nt er t ext ual

s t udy. I n The Pr obl ems of Dost oevsky ’ s Poet i cs, Bakht i n

descr i bes l i t er ar y genr e as cont ai ni ng “ t he most s t abl e,

‘ et er nal ’ t endenci es i n l i t er at ur e’ s devel opment [ …] , ” yet a

genr e i s “ r ebor n and r enewed at ever y new st age i n t he

devel opment of l i t er at ur e and i n ever y i ndi v i dual wor k of a gi ven

genr e” ( 106) . I n “ The Pr obl em of Speech Genr es, ” wher e he

di scusses t he speech genr es of ut t er ances ( r angi ng f r om t he

sent ence t o t he f ul l - l engt h t ext ) , he not es t hat speech genr es

Page 39: Inter Text Uality

61

ar e het er ogeneous i n t he ext r eme, and t hat t hei r di ver si t y i s

l i nked t o t he di ver s i t y of t he human exper i ence ( 60- 61) . Thus,

genr e can be seen as an ever - shi f t i ng ar r ay of speech t ypes.

Bakht i n di vi des speech genr es i nt o pr i mar y ( si mpl e) and secondar y

( compl ex) speech genr es; t he compl ex speech genr es such as novel s

absor b pr i mar y speech genr es such as l et t er s ( 61- 62) . However ,

most i mpor t ant f or our pr oj ect i s Bakht i n’ s asser t i on t hat “ st yl e

i s i nsepar abl y r el at ed t o t he ut t er ance and t o t ypi cal f or ms of

ut t er ances [ …] ” ( 63) : t her e i s an “ or gani c , i nsepar abl e l i nk

bet ween st yl e and genr e [ …] each spher e has and appl i es i t s own

genr es t hat cor r espond t o i t s own speci f i c condi t i ons” ( 64) . He

al so s t at es,

Wher e t her e i s s t y l e t her e i s genr e. The t r ansf er of

s t yl e f r om one genr e t o anot her not onl y al t er s t he

way a st yl e sounds, under condi t i ons of a genr e

unnat ur al t o i t , but al so vi ol at es or r enews t he gi ven

genr e. ( 66)

Fi nal l y, Bakht i n al so suggest s t hat an i ndi v i dual ’ s speech i s

adapt ed f or a speci f i c genr e, i t t akes t he f or m of t he genr e; and

i f speech genr es di d not exi st , communi cat i on woul d be al most

i mpossi bl e ( 78- 79) . We r el y on st yl i st i c mar ker s i n or der t o

det er mi ne genr e, whi ch makes communi cat i on possi bl e. Genr e i s

t hus l i nked t o f or m, as wel l as t heme. I wi l l be us i ng t hi s

poi nt i n or der t o come t o concl usi ons about t he genr e of

Chr oni cl es.

Page 40: Inter Text Uality

62

Now I wi l l br i ef l y def i ne t he genr es of hi st or i ogr aphy,

f i ct i on and ( pol i t i cal ) phi l osophy, as I wi l l be usi ng t he t er ms

i n t he next sect i ons. As I ment i oned above, Ar i st ot l e i n t he

Poet i cs separ at ed out hi st or y f r om poet r y as a genr e. He t hen

def i ned hi st or y as t he genr e t hat “ r el at es act ual event s, ” and

poet r y as t he genr e t hat r el at es “ t he ki nd of event s t hat mi ght

occur . ” He went on t o suggest t hat poet r y i s “ mor e phi l osophi cal

and mor e el evat ed t han hi st or y [ …] ” ( 51a36- 51b8) . I n t he cont ext

of bi bl i cal l i t er at ur e, Mar c Zvi Br et t l er has def i ned hi st or y as

“ a nar r at i ve t hat pr esent s a past ” ( 12) and has opposed i t t o

i deol ogy, whi ch he def i nes as a t ype of set s of bel i ef s ( 14) . He

does not use t he t er m l i t er at ur e; i nst ead, he uses i deol ogy,

suggest i ng t hat j ust because a t ext has l i t er ar y f eat ur es t hat

does not mean i t i s l i t er at ur e ( 17) . Bot h Ar i st ot l e and

Br et t l er , t her ef or e, pl ace hi s t or y or hi st or i ogr aphy on one si de,

and t he t hi ngs t hat “ mi ght occur ” on t he ot her .

G. Bower sock does not expl i c i t l y def i ne t he t er ms “ f i c t i on”

and “ hi s t or y” i n hi s Fi c t i on as Hi st or y , but i mpl i es t hat hi st or y

i s what r eal l y happened and f i ct i on i s what di d not . However , he

does go on t o show how, l at er i n t he cl ass i cal per i od, Roman

aut hor s such as Luci an “ t r i e[ d] t o pul l down t he di s t i nct i on

bet ween f i ct i on t hat we accept as f i c t i on and f i ct i on t hat i s

pr esent ed as a r ecor d of r eal event s” ( 5- 6) . Al t hough Her odot us

had descr i bed hi s wor k as “ r esear ches, ” by t he f i r st cent ur y BCE,

t he t er m hi s t or i a meant pl ot , “ t he r ecei ved account of t he past

Page 41: Inter Text Uality

63

t hat r eached back i nt o myt hi cal t i mes wi t hout a br eak” ( 7- 8) .

Cr eat i ng f i c t i on t hr ough t he r ewr i t i ng of hi st or y ( t he r euse of

pl ot as Ar i s t ot l e descr i bed such r euse) was i mpor t ant i n anc i ent

t i mes ( 12) . Mei r St er nber g descr i bes t he usual opposi t i on

bet ween hi st or y and f i ct i on, but t hen descr i bes bot h hi s t or y-

wr i t i ng and f i ct i on- wr i t i ng as di scour ses: one c l ai ms t o be

f act ual and t he ot her cl ai ms t he “ f r eedom of i nvent i on” ( 25) . He

al so c l ai ms t hat one cannot t el l t he di f f er ence bet ween f i ct i on

and hi st or y by f or mal char act er i st i cs al one; t hey can be

di st i ngui shed onl y by t hei r pur pose ( 30) . Thi s i s cont r ar y t o

Bakht i n’ s cl ai m, whi ch I di scussed above, t hat ever y genr e has

i t s own st yl e.

I n t hi s di sser t at i on, I wi l l be us i ng t he gener i c l abel s of

“ hi s t or i ogr aphy, ” “ f i c t i on, ” and “ phi l osophy. ” Bear i ng i n mi nd

t he di scussi on above, I def i ne “ hi st or i ogr aphy” as a nar r at i ve

about t he past t hat makes a t r ut h cl ai m about t he past i t

r ecount s; “ f i c t i on” as a nar r at i ve t hat makes no t r ut h c l ai m

about i t s st or y; and “ phi l osophy” as a pr ose r ender i ng whi ch

makes a t r ut h cl ai m about i t s i deol ogy. Phi l osophy, t her ef or e,

can be i n nar r at i ve f or m r ecount i ng t he past , l i ke

hi st or i ogr aphy, i t can al so make no t r ut h cl ai m about t he past

t hat i t r ecount s, l i ke f i c t i on. However , i t does make a t r ut h

c l ai m about i t s under l yi ng message. As we wi l l see bel ow, t her e

i s a good deal of debat e as t o t he genr e of bot h t he Cyr opaedi a

and Chr oni cl es. I woul d suggest t hat al t hough f or us i t i s

Page 42: Inter Text Uality

64

uncl ear as t o t he genr e of t hese wor ks, f or t he anci ent s i t may

have been per f ect l y cl ear ( c f . Bakht i n, “ Speech Genr es” 98) .

Bef or e I begi n t o amass my evi dence i n Chapt er s Thr ee t hr ough

Fi ve, I wi l l br i ef l y out l i ne t he var i ous ways schol ar s have

pl aced t hese t wo t ext s i nt o a gener i c cat egor y.

The Cyr opaedi a

The l i f e of Xenophon and t he cont ext f or hi s wor k i s

r easonabl y wel l known, as I poi nt ed out i n t he I nt r oduct i on t o

t hi s di sser t at i on. He l i ved dur i ng a t i me of consi der abl e

pol i t i cal conf us i on and war among t he Gr eek ci t y- st at es, and

dur i ng a t i me of t he f l ower i ng of phi l osophy. 18 Xenophon’ s

wr i t i ngs as a whol e can be di v i ded i nt o t wo gener al cat egor i es:

hi st or i ogr aphy and phi l osophy. Cer t ai nl y he i s bet t er known as a

hi st or i an t oday, but i n ant i qui t y he was mor e known f or hi s

phi l osophi cal wor ks, and i n ant i qui t y and dur i ng t he Renai ssance

hi s most i nf l uent i al wor k was t he Cyr opaedi a ( Luce 99) . Whet her

we shoul d vi ew t he Cyr opaedi a as hi s t or i ogr aphy or phi l osophy i s

not much debat ed: schol ar s gener al l y agr ee t hat i t i s not a wor k

of hi s t or i ogr aphy. 19 I n di scuss i ng what he t er ms “ hi s t or y ’ s

compet i t or s, ” Char l es For nar a i ncl udes t he Cyr opaedi a under t he

genr e of “ phi l osophi cal hi st or y” or “ ut opi an hi s t or y . ” He

descr i bes t he phi l osophi cal / ut opi an hi st or y as havi ng

“ scr upul ousl y mai nt ai ned t he f i c t i on of hi st or i c i t y, however

gr eat i t s depar t ur e f r om i t ” ( 175) . 20 He suggest s t hat Xenophon

was abl e t o use a f or ei gn set t i ng i n a hi s t or i cal past i n or der

Page 43: Inter Text Uality

65

t o expr ess hi s own t heor et i cal v i ews. The “ hi st or i cal

char act er s ser ved as t he mout hpi ece of t he phi l osopher ’ s

opi ni ons, ” opi ni ons whi ch wer e gi ven t he veneer of hi s t or i ci t y or

r eal i t y ( 176) . Phi l i p St adt er poi nt s out t hat Xenophon sai d t hat

he had made “ i nqui r i es, ” j ust as an anci ent hi st or i an woul d

c l ai m. I t i s onl y when t he ser i es of l ong di al ogues begi n near

t he end of Book 1 t hat t he r eader r eal i zes t hat t hi s i s not a

wor k of hi st or i ogr aphy, even t hough Xenophon di d pr esent some

f act ual hi st or i cal mat er i al ( 461- 63) . Momi gl i ano poi nt s out t hat

Xenophon was not t r y i ng t o wr i t e t he hi s t or y of Cyr us, but r at her

pr esent hi s por t r ai t of t he i deal r ul er ( Al i en 134) . Pi er r e

Car l i er suggest s t hat Xenophon woul d have been abl e t o choose

f r om var i ous ver si ons of t he Cyr us- l egends t hat wer e i n

c i r cul at i on i n or der t o make hi s poi nt s ( 133) . Gener al l y t oday,

t hen, t her e ar e t hr ee ways of vi ewi ng t he Cyr opaedi a: as a novel

( f i c t i on) , as a bi ogr aphy ( a sub- genr e of hi st or i ogr aphy) , or as

pol i t i cal phi l osophy.

Some schol ar s have t r i ed t o see t he Cyr opaedi a as a novel ,

t he f i r s t novel of i t s k i nd, as I di scussed above when r ef er r i ng

t o Bakht i n. Besi des Bakht i n, Wi l l i am Hi ggi ns al so di scusses t he

Cyr opaedi a as a novel , suggest i ng t hat i n t hi s wor k “ t he i deal

and t he hi st or i cal coul d mer ge t o cr eat e t he f i r st novel [ …]

Hi st or y t ur ned t o f i ct i on coul d per mi t t he el uci dat i on of i deas

concer ni ng t he t ypi cal and t he t i mel ess” ( 44) . He l at er suggest s

t hat t he Cyr opaedi a i s mor e of a pr ose epi c i n whi ch Cyr us i s t he

Page 44: Inter Text Uality

66

her o ( 53) , and al so asser t s t hat t her e i s l i t t l e of phi l osophy

and phi l osopher s i n t he wor k ( 55) . Al exandr u Ci zek al so

consi der s t he Cyr opaedi a a novel , cal l i ng i t “ a whol l y or i gi nal

f i ct i on” and “ t he f i r s t Bi l dungsr oman i n wor l d l i t er at ur e f r eel y

gover ned by t he f or mat i ve wi l l of t he aut hor ” ( 548) . James Tat um

has been t he most el oquent aut hor on t he subj ect of t he

Cyr opaedi a as novel , char act er i z i ng i t as “ bot h i deal i st i c and

r omant i c , ” and a pr ecur sor t o t he Gr eek r omance; but he al so

r emi nds us t hat i t shoul d be r ead as “ pol i t i cal educat i on”

( “ Educat i on” 16) . The novel i s t i c f eat ur es of t he Cyr opaedi a ar e

especi al l y evi dent i n t he on- goi ng s t or y of Pant hea and

Abr adat as, whi ch does seem t o ant i ci pat e some of t he same

concer ns of t he l at er Gr eek novel s but i s much mor e mor al i st i c

( 19- 20) . As an i deol ogi cal novel , t he Cyr opaedi a pr esent s i t s

cent r al message r epeat edl y so t hat i t s l esson i s conveyed: i t i s

aut hor i t ar i an f i ct i on, wher e Xenophon “ i nt er t wi ned t he pol i t i cal

and t he f i ct i onal i n a s i ngl e t ext ” ( 25- 27) . Tat um poi nt s out

t hat Ci cer o pr ai sed t he Cyr opaedi a pr eci sel y because i t was

f i ct i on wi t h a pol i t i cal pur pose ( JT 9) .

Tat um’ s ar t i cl e l eads us t o a di scuss i on of what many

schol ar s consi der t he Cyr opaedi a t o be, a wor k of pol i t i cal

phi l osophy ( pol i t ei a- l i t er at ur e) i n t he f or m of a bi ogr aphy.

Momi gl i ano suggest s t hat t he Cyr opaedi a i s t he f i r st and most

accompl i shed exampl e of t he Gr eek bi ogr aphy, but i t was not ( and

never cl ai med t o be) t he t r ue account of t he l i f e of a r eal

Page 45: Inter Text Uality

67

per son. Thi s bi ogr aphy whi ch was no bi ogr aphy used a mi xt ur e

of f act and f i ct i on i n or der t o communi cat e i t s phi l osophi c

message. Momi gl i ano al so poi nt s out t hat t he bor der bet ween

f i ct i on and r eal i t y was mor e bl ur r ed i n t he anci ent bi ogr aphy

t han i t was i n anc i ent hi s t or i ogr aphy ( Devel opment 55- 56) . J. R

Mor gan poi nt s out t hat t he anci ent novel i s t s of t en const r uct ed

t hei r t ext s as i f t hey wer e hi st or i es ( we mi ght cal l t hem

hi st or i cal novel s) ( 206) .

Bodi l Due has i ndi cat ed t hat t he Cyr opaedi a i s bot h i n f or m

( di scuss i ng t he “ educat i on” of Cyr us) and i n l engt h ( ver y l ong)

ver y di f f er ent f r om ot her exampl es of t he genr e of pol i t i cal

phi l osophy, especi al l y i f we compar e i t t o Xenophon’ s

Const i t ut i on of t he Lacedaemoni ans, whi ch i s much shor t er ( BD

14) . She t hus consi der s t he wor k t o be devot ed t o di scuss i ng t he

best way of gover ni ng, but put wi t hi n t he f or m of a bi ogr aphy or

f i ct i onal bi ogr aphy of a hi s t or i cal f i gur e. Thi s f i gur e i s t he

subj ect of t he book, maki ng t he book a pol i t i cal wor k wi t h bot h

novel i st i c and bi ogr aphi cal t endenci es ( BD 25- 26) . I n her l at er

ar t i cl e, Due consi der s t he wor k t o be a novel , pl ai n and s i mpl e:

mor e speci f i cal l y, a hi s t or i cal novel or an educat i onal novel ;

she r ej ect s i t s cl assi f i cat i on as ei t her a bi ogr aphy or as a

hi st or y ( “ Xenophon” 588) . Jean Lucci oni al so consi der s t he

Cyr opaedi a as a hi st or i cal novel , bet ween hi st or y and novel ( 213;

cf . Luce 99) .

Page 46: Inter Text Uality

68

Debor ah Ger a consi der s t he Cyr opaedi a t o be a t ype of

bi ogr aphy desi gned t o be a vehi c l e f or pr esent i ng Xenophon’ s own

concer ns. Thus Xenophon used t he f or m of a bi ogr aphy, whi ch had

al r eady devel oped i nt o a genr e, but pr esent ed t he message of

pol i t i cal phi l osophy. He want ed hi s wor k t o be cl assi f i ed wi t hi n

t he genr e of pol i t ei a- l i t er at ur e; he had al r eady wr i t t en ot her

wor ks whi ch cl ear l y f i t wi t hi n t hat genr e, i nc l udi ng t he

Const i t ut i on of t he Lacedaemoni ans and t he Hi er o. Ther e ar e

i ndi cat i ons t hat Xenophon want ed t he Cyr opaedi a t o be seen as a

wor k compar abl e t o Pl at o’ s Republ i c, and i n ant i qui t y many

aut hor s saw Pl at o and Xenophon as havi ng been i n compet i t i on

( t hough Ger a ar gued t hat t hey pr obabl y wer e not ) . Ger a’ s

assessment of t he Cyr opaedi a’ s genr e i s t hus not much di f f er ent

f r om Due’ s ; a bi ogr aphy t hat hi ghl i ght s t he concer ns of pol i t i cal

phi l osophy ( 1- 13) .

St adt er cal l s t he Cyr opaedi a a “ di dact i c nar r at i ve, ” wher e

Xenophon’ s use of t i me and space, char act er , and i deal i zat i on

combi ne t o f or m a nar r at i ve about Cyr us much cl oser t o Pl at o’ s

depi ct i on of Socr at es t han t o a hi st or i cal f i gur e. He cal l s

Cyr us a par adi gm of t he i deal r ul er ( 490- 91) . Thus, al t hough he

does not use t he t er ms phi l osophy or pol i t ei a- l i t er at ur e, by

i mpl i cat i on he suggest s t hat pol i t i cal phi l osophy i s t he nat ur e

and f unct i on of t he Cyr opaedi a. St even Hi r sch al so sees t he

pur pose of t he Cyr opaedi a as bei ng a di dact i c nar r at i ve on

educat i on, admi ni s t r at i on and mi l i t ar y af f ai r s ( “ 1001” 71) . John

Page 47: Inter Text Uality

69

Di l l er y sees t he i dea of t he i deal communi t y t o be s t r ong i n

bot h t he Anabasi s and t he Hel l eni ca, due per haps t o t he br eakdown

of or gani zed soc i et y i n Gr eece i n t he f our t h cent ur y ( 43- 44) .

Per haps he coul d have expanded hi s wor k t o l ook at t he Cyr opaedi a

as wel l . I f i nd i t i nt er est i ng t hat gener al l y c l ass i c i s t s have

t ended t o cl assi f y t he Cyr opaedi a as a novel or bi ogr aphy, and

t ended t o r esi st t he c l ass i f i cat i on as phi l osophy, whi l e

pol i t i cal phi l osopher s have t ended t o cl assi f y t he Cyr opaedi a as

a wor k of phi l osophy, as I wi l l show bel ow. 21

When we t ur n t o t he pol i t i cal phi l osopher s, John Ray

suggest s t hat Xenophon hi msel f embodi ed t he compl et e man as

suggest ed by Xenophon’ s wor ks: bot h pol i t i cal ( as i n t he

Anabasi s) , and phi l osophi cal ( as i n t he Memor abi l i a) ( 241) . He

sees t he Cyr opaedi a as bei ng pr i mar i l y about i t s s t at ed mai n

pr obl em: how t o r ul e ( 225) , r at her t han bei ng a novel or

bi ogr aphy ( t hese t er ms do not even come up dur i ng hi s

di scussi on) . Lesl i e Rubi n di scusses t he Pant hea epi sodes not as

bei ng novel i st i c ( as so many c l ass i c i st s see t hem) , but r at her as

epi sodes whi ch hel p t o i l l umi nat e Xenophon’ s pol i t i cal

phi l osophy. The onl y phi l osophi cal di al ogues i n t he Cyr opaedi a

ar e t he di al ogues about l ove; Rubi n suggest s t hat t hese

di al ogues, al t hough phi l osophi cal i n nat ur e, ar e per t i nent f or

Xenophon’ s over al l pol i t i cal phi l osophy ( 391) . Lucc i oni poi nt s

out t hat Xenophon onl y i nc l uded i nf or mat i on r el evant t o hi s

t heor i es about r ul i ng ( 213- 14) . W. R. Newel l suggest s t hat t he

Page 48: Inter Text Uality

70

Cyr opaedi a “ can be r egar ded as t he cent er pi ece of Xenophon’ s

pol i t i cal wr i t i ngs” ( 891) .

My own hypot hesi s about t he genr e of t he Cyr opaedi a i s t hat

i t i s a wor k of pol i t i cal phi l osophy, whi ch means t hat i t can

i ncl ude t he f eat ur es of bi ogr aphy, hi st or i ogr aphy, and novel ( as

I def i ned t he genr es i n t he pr ev i ous sect i on) . I t i s ut opi an,

and pr esent s a wor l d t hat never ex i s t ed. I t i s a handbook, whi ch

pr esent s a summar y of Xenophon’ s t hought on ever yt hi ng f r om

char i ot t act i cs t o t he ar t of r ul i ng. Because i t i s set i n a

t i me and pl ace f ar r emoved f r om i t s aut hor , i t i s per haps easi er

t o see i t s pur pose. We wi l l see i n Chapt er Two how t he

i nt er t ext ual const r uct i on of Cyr us l eads us t o a descr i pt i on of

t he genr e of t he Cyr opaedi a.

Chr oni cl es

Fi r s t , I woul d l i ke t o under t ake a br i ef excur sus on t he

cont ext of t he pr oduct i on of Chr oni c l es. Unl i ke t he case of

Xenophon, si nce t he aut hor of Chr oni c l es i s anonymous, i t i s

di f f i cul t f or us t o pi n down t he l i t er ar y hi st or y of t he t ext ’ s

pr oduct i on. Her e, I wi l l gi ve a br i ef di scuss i on of t he possi bl e

cont ext f or t he pr oduct i on of Chr oni c l es i n or der t hat my

di scussi on of genr e and pur pose at t he end of t hi s sect i on mi ght

have some cont ext as wel l . We can pl ace Chr oni c l es r oughl y

wi t hi n t he per i od of Per si an r ul e of t he Near East ( 539- 333 BCE) ,

pr obabl y t owar ds t he end of t hat per i od of r ul e. Dur i ng t hi s

per i od, t he Per s i an admi ni st r at i ve di st r i c t of Yehud was smal l ,

Page 49: Inter Text Uality

71

poor , and pr i mar i l y composed of Jer usal em and i t s sur r oundi ng

hi nt er l ands. Ther e woul d have been an ext r emel y smal l per cent age

of t he popul at i on who had ei t her t he abi l i t y or l ei sur e t o cr eat e

wor ks of l i t er at ur e. The Chr oni cl er may have been a Templ e

scr i be ( t he usual vi ew) , or poss i bl y may have been a t eacher ( not

unl i ke t he f i gur e of t he sage i n bi bl i cal wi sdom l i t er at ur e) .

Yehud dur i ng t hi s per i od was r el at i vel y out - of - t he- way and

uni mpor t ant , r esour ce- poor , peopl e- poor . 22 That any l i t er at ur e at

al l was cr eat ed may seem mi r acul ous; but t he t ype of l i t er at ur e

t hat I wi l l ar gue t hat Chr oni c l es i s woul d be especi al l y

i mpor t ant f or a peopl e t r y i ng t o f or m some k i nd of i dent i t y i n

t hi s cont ext ( cf . Davi es 108- 115) .

Above, I di scussed t he r at i onal e f or seei ng Chr oni cl es as a

sor t of novel , whi ch al l ows us t o use a di al ogi c met hod of

r eadi ng t he t ext . Thi s i s not t he usual way t hat schol ar s see

t hi s t ext . M. P. Gr aham and St even McKenzi e have edi t ed t wo

books, and ar e i n t he pr ocess of col l ect i ng a t hi r d, ent i t l ed The

Chr oni cl er as Hi st or i an, The Chr oni c l er as Aut hor , and The

Chr oni cl er as Theol ogi an. 23 These t hr ee t i t l es seem t o me t o

descr i be qui t e c l ear l y t he t hr ee cat egor i es i nt o whi ch schol ar l y

under st andi ng of t he nat ur e and pur pose of Chr oni c l es may be

gr ouped. I wi l l begi n by di scussi ng how Chr oni c l es i s under st ood

as hi s t or y , t hen I wi l l t ur n t o i t s under st andi ng as t heol ogy,

and f i nal l y I wi l l t ur n t o i t s under st andi ng as l i t er at ur e, i . e. ,

f i ct i on.

Page 50: Inter Text Uality

72

I t i s common t o under st and Chr oni c l es as bei ng

hi st or i ogr aphy: t hese books r ecount t he past , use sour ce

ci t at i ons, di v i de t i me i nt o er as or r ei gns, and so on. The ver y

t i t l e of t he books i n Hebr ew, “ Annal s , ” i mpl i es a hi st or i cal

pur pose, al t hough we must r emember t hat t i t l es i n anci ent t i mes

wer e of t en at t ached not by t he aut hor but by l at er scr i bes or

l i br ar i ans. The pl acement of t he books i n t he Chr i st i an canon,

among t he ot her “ hi st or i cal ” books ( r at her t han among t he

“ Wr i t i ngs” as i n t he Jewi sh canon) , al so cont r i but es t o t he

not i on of Chr oni cl es as hi st or i ogr aphy. Per haps t he c l ear est

expr essi on of t he i dea of Chr oni cl es as hi st or i ogr aphy has come

f r om Japhet ,

A consi der at i on of t he wor k’ s r el evant f eat ur es, such

as ai m, pl an, f or m, and met hod, must l ead t o t he

concl usi on t hat Chr oni cl es i s a hi st or y, an

i di osyncr at i c expr essi on of bi bl i cal hi s t or i ogr aphy.

I t i s a pr esent at i on of consequent event s, f ocussed on

t he f or t unes of a col l ect i ve body, I sr ael , al ong a

per i od of t i me wi t hi n a def i ned chr onol ogi cal and

t er r i t or i al set t i ng. The event s do not const i t ut e an

i nci dent al col l ect i on of epi sodes but ar e bot h

sel ect ed and st r uct ur ed. They ar e r epr esent ed i n a

r at i onal sequence, gover ned by acknowl edged and

expl i c i t l y f or mul at ed pr i nci pl es of cause and ef f ect ,

Page 51: Inter Text Uality

73

and ar e j udged by st r i ngent cr i t er i a of hi st or i cal

pr obabi l i t y. 24 ( SJ 32)

She t hen goes on t o di st i ngui sh bet ween t he ai ms and met hods of

anci ent ( by whi ch she means bi bl i cal ) and moder n hi st or i ans ( SJ

32- 34) . For Japhet , t he ai m of t he Chr oni cl er ’ s hi s t or y was t o

r ewr i t e I sr ael ’ s hi s t or y i n or der t o expl ai n t he past i n t er ms

r el evant t o t he pr esent and t o l egi t i mat e cont empor ar y pr act i ces

by connect i ng t hem t o an aut hor i t at i ve past ( SJ 49) . She al so

poi nt s out t he i mpor t ance of t he so- cal l ed “ Levi t i cal Ser mons” i n

Chr oni cl es – t hese speeches pl ay t he same r ol e i n Chr oni cl es as

or at i ons i n ot her anci ent hi st or i ogr aphy ( “ Rel at i onshi p” 307) .

Kennet h Hogl und has wr i t t en an excel l ent essay t hat

cont i nues Japhet ’ s ar gument s about anci ent hi s t or i ogr aphy i n a

mor e nuanced way. He l ooks not onl y at bi bl i cal model s f or

hi st or i ogr aphy, but at ot her anc i ent model s as wel l . He poi nt s

out t hat geneal ogi es pl ayed an i mpor t ant r ol e i n t he

hi st or i ogr aphy of t he Hel l eni s t i c wor l d ( 22) . He not es t hat t he

r ol e of t he pr ophet i n Chr oni c l es i s par al l el ed i n t he “ wi se

counsel or ” scenes i n Her odot us ( 24) . Li kewi se, t he use of “ st ock

number s” f or t r oops or peopl e f i nds a par al l el i n Hel l eni s t i c

hi st or i ogr aphy, as does t he use of sour ce ci t at i ons ( 27- 28) . He

concl udes t hat s i nce many of t hese f eat ur es of Chr oni c l es ar e

absent f r om t he Deut er onomi c Hi s t or y , t he Chr oni cl er was wor ki ng

wi t h a di f f er ent concept i on of hi s t or i ogr aphy, one c l oser t o t he

concept of hi s t or i ogr aphy f ound i n t he Hel l eni st i c wor l d, and

Page 52: Inter Text Uality

74

t hat t he Chr oni c l er was wor k i ng wel l wi t hi n t he accept ed

pr act i ces of t he anci ent wor l d ( 29) .

Rodney Duke sees t hr ee f unct i ons behi nd bi bl i cal hi s t or i cal

nar r at i ves: 1) t o pr eser ve t he t r adi t i ons and i dent i t y of I sr ael ;

2) t o r espond t o t he needs of an audi ence; and 3) t o pr esent a

wor l d- vi ew ( “ Model ” 66) . He i s i nt er est ed i n a model of anal ysi s

t hat woul d el uci dat e t hi s wor l dv i ew, a model t hat he devel ops

f r om t he wor k of Hayden Whi t e. Thus, f or Duke, t he sel ect i on of

subj ect mat t er by t he hi st or i an r eveal s t he hi st or i an’ s val ues:

i n t he case of Chr oni c l es, t he pr i mar y event s ar e t hose deal i ng

wi t h t he est abl i shment of t he Davi di c monar chy, t he cul t , pr oper

wor shi p, and I sr ael ’ s success. The r el at i onshi ps bet ween past

event s communi cat e t he hi s t or i an’ s r eal i t y : i n Chr oni c l es, Yhwh

i s t he pr i mar y agent of hi st or y, and seeki ng or f or sak i ng Yhwh

r esul t s i n di v i ne bl essi ng or cur se ( r espect i vel y) . The event s

of t he pl ot communi cat e t he hi st or i an’ s t el eol ogy: i n Chr oni cl es,

i t i s t he pr omi se of r est or at i on i n t he l and of I sr ael . These

al l combi ne t o communi cat e an i deol ogy about pr oper human act i on:

i n Chr oni c l es, by r epr esent i ng t he audi ence’ s past , t he hi st or i an

cal l ed f or a pr oper r el at i onshi p wi t h Yhwh and hope of hi s

bl essi ng ( 67- 76) . El sewher e, Duke uses Ar i s t ot el i an r het or i c t o

anal yze how t he Chr oni cl er achi eved hi s pur pose: t he Chr oni c l er

used exampl es and maxi ms, bol s t er ed by speeches of aut hor i t at i ve

char act er s i n or der t o dr i ve home hi s poi nt : t hat ev i l k i ngs

Page 53: Inter Text Uality

75

r ecei ve r et r i but i on and i deal ki ngs bl essi ng ( Per suasi ve 150-

51) . 25

Si mon de Vr i es poi nt s out t he di f f er ences bet ween t he

Chr oni cl er ’ s hi s t or y and t he Deut er onomi c hi st or y of whi ch

Samuel - Ki ngs i s t he l ast hal f : t he Deut er onomi c hi st or y i s t he

hi st or y of I sr ael , whi l e t he Chr oni c l er ’ s hi st or y i s t he hi s t or y

of God – i t i s t he hi s t or y of God’ s congr egat i on ( SJV 18) . De

Vr i es sees Chr oni c l es as embodyi ng a cyc l i cal r at her t han a

l i near v i ew of hi s t or y : a ser i es of “ sabbat hs” f or t he l and,

l eadi ng up t o t he l ongest “ sabbat h” of t hem al l , t he exi l e ( SJV

18- 19) .

Br et t l er uses Chr oni cl es as hi s model when descr i bi ng t he

genr e of bi bl i cal hi st or y, pr ef er r i ng Chr oni cl es f or t hi s pur pose

t o t he Deut er onomi c hi st or y used by ot her schol ar s, such as Van

Set er s i n I n Sear ch of Hi s t or y . He ar gues t hat t he Chr oni cl er

wr ot e hi s wor k as hi st or i ogr aphy, and t hat hi s manner of

pr esent i ng t he hi s t or y of I sr ael ( hi s wor l dv i ew, hi s use of

sour ce c i t at i ons) al l owed hi s hi st or y t o be accept ed. He al so

ar gues t hat t he Chr oni cl er r el i ed on t hi s audi ence’ s knowl edge of

Samuel - Ki ngs ( Sear ch 20- 23) . One of t he Chr oni c l er ’ s mai n t ool s

was t ypol ogi es and pat t er ns: t hus Davi d’ s r emoval of t he Ar k i n 1

Chr on. 15 i s pat t er ned af t er a s i mi l ar event under t aken by

Sol omon i n 1 Ki ngs 8; Hezeki ah i s pat t er ned af t er Sol omon;

Davi d’ s pur chase of t he Templ e s i t e i n 1 Chr on. 21 i s pat t er ned

af t er Abr aham’ s pur chase of t he Cave of Machpel ah i n Gen. 23;

Page 54: Inter Text Uality

76

Sol omon’ s accessi on i s pat t er ned af t er Joshua’ s successi on t o

Moses ( based on Wi l l i amson, “ Accessi on” ) ; and so on ( 34- 37) . For

Br et t l er , t he Chr oni cl er “ was so sur e of cer t ai n pol i t i cal and

r el i gi ous i deol ogi es t hat he r ewr ot e t he accept ed ver s i on of

hi st or y t o conf or m t o ( and t o conf i r m) what he t r ul y bel i eved

happened” ( 47) . 26

The i ssue of Chr oni c l es’ hi s t or i cal r el i abi l i t y i s one t hat

f ol l ows f r om seei ng Chr oni cl es as hi s t or i ogr aphy. I saac Kal i mi

makes a good poi nt when he says t hat t he i ssue of Chr oni cl es ’

r el i abi l i t y as hi s t or y shoul d not over shadow how we eval uat e i t s

hi st or i ogr aphi c nat ur e – he expl i c i t l y compar es Chr oni cl es t o

Her odot us on t hi s poi nt ( “ Hi st or i an” 85) . 27 However , he does

cl ai m t hat Chr oni c l es cannot be pr oper l y under st ood wi t hout

knowi ng Samuel - Ki ngs ( 87) , a c l ai m whi ch I di sput e, and whi ch I

wi l l at t empt t o di spr ove i n Chapt er s Thr ee t hr ough Fi ve.

Cont r ar y t o bi bl i cal schol ar s ear l i er i n t he cent ur y, i t i s now

commonl y accept ed t hat Chr oni c l es can be used as a hi s t or i cal

sour ce i n onl y a ver y l i mi t ed way, once we f act or i n

ar chaeol ogi cal and ext r a- bi bl i cal t ext ual mat er i al . 28

I wi l l t ur n next t o a di scussi on of Chr oni cl es as a

t heol ogi cal wor k. Ther e ar e t wo basi c appr oaches her e, whi ch

of t en over l ap: 1) Chr oni cl es was wr i t t en as a wor k of t heol ogy,

wi t h al most excl us i vel y t heol ogi cal ai ms, not hi st or i cal ones; 2)

Chr oni cl es was wr i t t en as a mi dr ash or pr ot o- mi dr ash on Samuel -

Ki ngs, i . e. , as an exeget i cal exer ci se. Br et t l er has poi nt ed out

Page 55: Inter Text Uality

77

t he per vasi veness of t he t heol ogi cal appr oaches t o Chr oni c l es

i n r ecent year s ( 23) . Of t he r ecent comment ar i es, onl y Japhet ’ s

( SJ) r eal l y t r eat s Chr oni c l es as hi s t or i ogr aphy; t he r est

gener al l y l ook t o t he t heol ogy of Chr oni cl es.

Al t hough I i dent i f i ed Japhet as a schol ar mor e concer ned

wi t h Chr oni c l es as hi s t or i ogr aphy, her wor k on t he i deol ogy of

Chr oni cl es has def i ni t e t heol ogi cal over t ones. Her i deas on t he

Chr oni cl er ’ s t heol ogy have been ver y i nf l uent i al , per haps mor e so

s i nce The I deol ogy of t he Book of Chr oni cl es and i t s Pl ace i n

Bi bl i cal Thought was t r ans l at ed i nt o Engl i sh. She doubt s t hat

t her e i s one over r i di ng t heol ogy of Chr oni cl es,

Chr oni cl es i s not a mani f est o devot ed t o a speci f i c

pol i t i cal movement but a mor e gener al and

compr ehensi ve t heol ogi cal st ock- t aki ng, st r i vi ng t o

achi eve a new r el i gi ous bal ance i n t he f ace of a

changi ng wor l d. ( SJ 43- 44)

Rat her , var i ous t heol ogi cal t hemes ar e expr essed t hr ough t he

wor k i ng out of hi s t or y . She poi nt s out t hat f or t he Chr oni c l er ,

I sr ael ’ s covenant wi t h Yhwh di d not have a basi s i n hi st or y, but

was r at her a uni ver sal const ant . The pr i mar y at t r i but e of God’ s

r ul e was t he concept of j ust i ce: God’ s absol ut e j ust r ul e was not

a pr omi se f or t he f ut ur e but a hi s t or i cal f act . Al t hough t he

Templ e and pr oper wor shi p wer e i mpor t ant , t he i ndi vi dual

I sr ael i t e al so had t o be r i ght eous i n conduct and at t i t ude ( SJ

44- 45) .

Page 56: Inter Text Uality

78

Wi l l i am Johnst one has pr oduced a comment ar y and sever al

ar t i cl es devot ed t o del i neat i ng t he t heol ogy of Chr oni cl es. He

has di sput ed t hat Chr oni cl es i s hi st or i ogr aphy,

The Chr oni cl er i s not now i nt er est ed i n t he

hi st or i an’ s di scr i mi nat i ons of t i me and epoch; r at her ,

hi s pur pose i s t o gat her t oget her i n a gl obal manner

t he f ul ness of I sr ael past and pr esent i n t i mel ess

cont empor anei t y. He i s concer ned t o por t r ay an i deal

I sr ael i n al l - i ncl us i ve t er ms, not t o r econst r uct t he

act ual popul at i on at some poi nt i n t i me. ( “ Gui l t ” 115-

116)

Over al l , he sees Chr oni c l es as a t heol ogi cal essay concer ned wi t h

t he r el at i onshi p bet ween God and humani t y, and t he pur pose of

I sr ael wi t hi n t hat r el at i onshi p. For hi m, 1 Chr on. 1- 2 Chr on. 9

depi ct s I sr ael ’ s at t empt t o accompl i sh t he i deal f or m of l i f e

wi t h God, and 2 Chr on. 10- 36 depi c t s t he f ai l ur e t o do so ( WJ 1:

10) . For Johnst one, t he pr obl em of ma( al was t he r eason f or t he

Exi l e; t her e was a br eak i n ma( al onl y under Davi d and Sol omon –

he def i nes ma( al as t he f ai l ur e t o gi ve God hi s due ( “ Gui l t ” 116-

118) . I wi l l di scuss ma( al f ur t her i n Chapt er Thr ee. Johnst one

al so br i ef l y t ouches on t he poss i bi l i t y of Chr oni c l es bei ng a

k i nd of mi dr ash, i . e. , t he r ei nt er pr et at i on of a canoni cal t ext ,

and t hat t he Chr oni c l er saw hi msel f as hei r t o a k i nd of

pr ophet i c t r adi t i on of pr esent i ng t he l i f e of I sr ael ( WJ 1: 23) .

Page 57: Inter Text Uality

79

Pet er Ackr oyd al so di spenses wi t h t he not i on of

Chr oni cl es as a wor k of hi st or i ogr aphy, i nst ead deal i ng wi t h t he

Chr oni cl er as an i nt er pr et er ( Chr oni c l er 275- 76) . He suggest s

t hat we mi ght see Chr oni cl es as a ki nd of summa of t he t heol ogy

of t he ent i r e Hebr ew Bi bl e, at t empt i ng t o uni f y t he t r adi t i on i n

a compr ehensi ve way ( 280) . The Chr oni cl er ’ s t heol ogy was

concer ned wi t h: 1) t he Templ e cul t ; 2) t he Davi di c i deal ; 3) t he

l i nk bet ween Davi d and t he Templ e; and 4) t he cent r al i t y of

Jer usal em t o t he communi t y ( 282- 288) .

Wi l l i amson suggest s t hat i t i s mor e usef ul t o l ook at t he

t hemes t hat wer e i mpor t ant t o t he Chr oni cl er , r at her t han t r yi ng

t o sket ch out t he Chr oni cl er ’ s t heol ogy ( HGMW 24) ; however , hi s

suggest ed t hemes seem t o me t o be t heol ogi cal i n scope. The mai n

t hemes f or Wi l l i amson ar e: 1) t he Peopl e I sr ael – a di st i nct i ve

not i on of t he peopl e of I sr ael as t he peopl e of God; 2) ki ngshi p

– wher e t he ki ngshi p of I sr ael i s l i nked t o t he ki ngshi p of God;

3) t he Templ e – especi al l y as t he f ul f i l l ment of al l t he var i ous

wor shi p t r adi t i ons of I sr ael ’ s past ; and 4) r et r i but i on and

r epent ance ( di scussed bel ow) ( HGMW 24- 33) . He al so suggest s t hat

t he Chr oni cl er saw Samuel - Ki ngs as a sour ce r at her t han a t ext

( i t was not unal t er abl e) , and t hat we shoul d l ook f or t he

Chr oni cl er ’ s ai ms i n hi s t hemes, not i n hi s use of ear l i er

mat er i al ( “ Hi s t or y” 33) .

The i dea of Chr oni cl es as expr essi ng a t heol ogy of

i mmedi at e r et r i but i on i s common, and i s di scussed i n t he wor ks of

Page 58: Inter Text Uality

80

many aut hor s. Wi l l i amson has poi nt ed out t hat t hi s has l ong

been r ecogni zed, especi al l y i n t he wor ks of Jul i us Wel l hausen and

Ger har d von Rad ( I sr ael 67) . Mor e r ecent l y, i t has been

di scussed i n t he wor k of Raymond Di l l ar d. Di l l ar d suggest s t hat

i n t he non- synopt i c passages of Chr oni cl es t her e i s st r ong

evi dence of t hi s r et r i but i on t heol ogy: seeki ng God, or humbl i ng

onesel f , or pr ay i ng or t ur ni ng t o God at cr uci al moment s i s

l i nked t o good f or t une; wher eas not seeki ng, not humbl i ng onesel f

or f or saki ng God i s l i nked t o ev i l f or t une. However , t hi s

doct r i ne does not al ways hol d, and i s weaker i n t he sect i ons of

Chr oni cl es t hat deal wi t h Davi d and Sol omon ( “ Rewar d” 165- 66,

169- 70) . Si mi l ar l y, Roddy Br aun, bui l di ng on Di l l ar d’ s wor k,

poi nt s out t hat t hi s i s t he f r amewor k i nt o whi ch al l eval uat i ons

of k i ngs i n Chr oni cl es ar e f i t t ed – but t her e i s al so r oom f or

r epent ance i n t he Chr oni cl er ’ s t heol ogi cal f r amewor k ( RB xxxvi i i -

xxxi x) .

Ehud Ben Zvi has wr i t t en a ser i es of ar t i c l es deal i ng wi t h

t he Chr oni cl er as a t heol ogi an. He poi nt s out t hat t he

Chr oni cl es expounded t he t heol ogy t hat i ndi v i dual act i ons l ead t o

per sonal r ewar ds or puni shment s ( a “ doct r i ne of r et r i but i on” ) ,

but t hat because t hi s t heol ogy does not al ways hol d t r ue ( “ Sense”

38- 39) , Chr oni cl es ’ t heol ogy i s mor e nuanced. Thus, t he Tor ah

( God’ s l aw) i s mor e i mpor t ant t han ei t her t he Templ e or t he

Davi di c ki ng: I sr ael i t es wi t hout a Davi di c k i ng or t he Templ e can

st i l l seek God’ s wi l l ( “ Gat eway” 239- 244) .

Page 59: Inter Text Uality

81

When we t ur n t o a di scussi on of Chr oni cl es as exeget i cal

or i nt er pr et i ve i n nat ur e, t he aut hor t hat s t ands out most i s

Mi chael Fi shbane. I n hi s Bi bl i cal I nt er pr et at i on i n Anci ent

I sr ael , al t hough he vi ews Chr oni cl es as hi st or i ogr aphy, he sees

i t s modus oper andi as bei ng exeget i cal , whi ch I woul d ar gue i s a

t heol ogi cal appr oach t o t he t ext . 29 Fi r s t , he cont r ast s

mi dr ashi c f eat ur es wi t h t he f eat ur es of hi st or i ogr aphy: t he

hi st or i ogr aphi c f eat ur es of Chr oni cl es i nc l ude i t s “ exposi t or y ,

di dact i c , or edi f y i ng” nat ur e ( 381) . Mi dr ashi c exegesi s , on t he

ot her hand, “ i s t he speci f i c r ei nt er pr et at i on or r ewor ki ng of

speci f i c sour ces, ” and t hus const i t ut es one of t he t echni ques of

hi st or i ogr aphy i n gener al ( 381) . Fi shbane makes t he poi nt t hat

t he Chr oni cl er woul d not have expect ed hi s wor k t o be r ead

synopt i cal l y wi t h Samuel - Ki ngs; r at her , t he Chr oni cl er was

cr eat i ng a new wor k, whi ch pur por t ed t o be aut hor i t at i ve.

However , we can uncover t he “ exeget i cal concer ns of t he

Chr oni cl er ” by compar i ng Chr oni c l es t o Samuel - Ki ngs as t he t ext

i s t r ansf or med t heol ogi cal l y ( 382- 83) . Thus, assessment s of t he

var i ous ki ngs ar e based not so much on whet her t hey di d r i ght or

wr ong ( as i n Ki ngs) , but r at her on t he pr omot i on of Tor ah

obser vance – t he emphasi s i s i ncr eased on mat t er s of t heol ogi cal

i mpor t ance ( 385- 87) . As wel l , t he Chr oni c l er r eshaped hi s

sour ces i n or der t o r ef l ect t he t heol ogi cal concer ns of hi s own

day ( 387- 88) . The Chr oni c l er al so i ncr eased t he i mpor t ance of

pr ophet s and pr ophet i c speeches, and by doi ng so was “ abl e t o

Page 60: Inter Text Uality

82

t each hi s cont empor ar i es about t he r est or at i ve power of

r epent ance and t he r ewar ds f or pi et y” ( 390- 91) .

Accor di ng t o Fi shbane, not onl y di d t he Chr oni cl er

t r ansf or m hi s sour ces t heol ogi cal l y; he al so came up wi t h new

t heol ogi cal expl anat i ons f or wel l - known hi st or i cal event s. He

expl ai ned event s accor di ng t o what was nor mat i ve i n hi s own day,

i . e. , accor di ng t o t he l egi s l at i on of t he Tor ah i n books such as

Levi t i cus and Number s ( 392- 94) . 30 One of hi s st r at egi es f or doi ng

so was t o r econt ext ual i ze t he ear l i er t r adi t i ons; he r egr ouped,

added, or del et ed mat er i al and combi ned t ext s i n new cont ext s i n

or der t o make hi s t heol ogi cal poi nt , a t echni que wel l - known by

t he l at er r abbi s ( 399) . Fi shbane r el i es on r abbi ni c model s f or

hi s descr i pt i on of exeget i cal met hods i n t he Bi bl e: he sees

evi dence f or t he devel opment of t hese model s i n t he Bi bl e i t sel f ,

bef or e t he l at er r abbi s devel oped t hei r own i nt er pr et i ve

t r adi t i ons. Al t hough i t may ver y wel l be t r ue t hat t he

r abbi ni cal met hods of a f ew cent ur i es l at er devel oped f r om

met hods of aut hor s l i ke t he Chr oni cl er , i t does not expl ai n how

t he Chr oni cl er devel oped hi s exeget i cal t echni que ( i f t hat i s

what i t i s) .

Fi nal l y, we t ur n t o a di scussi on of Chr oni cl es as a wor k of

l i t er at ur e, concer ned wi t h s t y l i st i c i ssues and not hi st or i cal or

t heol ogi cal ones. Her e, we mi ght ask t he quest i on of t he

Chr oni cl er ’ s pur pose i n t er ms of genr e: what l i t er ar y genr e was

t he Chr oni cl er wor ki ng wi t hi n, i f not wi t hi n t he genr es of

Page 61: Inter Text Uality

83

hi st or i ogr aphy or t heol ogy? T. Sugi mot o ar gues t hat cont r ar y

t o t he v i ews of schol ar s who see Chr oni c l es as hi s t or i ogr aphy or

t heol ogy, Chr oni cl es i s not exeget i cal or i nt er pr et i ve

l i t er at ur e: t he Chr oni cl er ’ s changes t o Samuel - Ki ngs ar e not

meant t o i nt er pr et or updat e Samuel - Ki ngs, but r at her ar e meant

t o enhance t he Chr oni c l er ’ s own l i t er ar y pur pose ( 70- 74) .

Lesl i e Al l en sees Chr oni cl es as a ser i es of homi l i es, i . e. ,

“ sel f - cont ai ned messages i n l i t er ar y f or m” ( 23) . He di scusses

t he var i ous r het or i cal mar ker s of t he uni t s of Chr oni c l es,

especi al l y wi t h r espect t o r ecur r i ng mot i f s, such as pr s i n 1

Chr on. 13- 15, and cont r ast ed mot i f s, such as t he cont r ast bet ween

t he House of Ahab and t he House of Davi d i n 2 Chr on. 21- 23. Li ke

most of t he essays i n The Chr oni cl er as Aut hor ( except i ons

i ncl ude t he cont r i but i ons by Boer , Wr i ght , and Tr ot t er ) , Al l en

per f or ms a l i t er ar y anal ys i s i n or der t o subst ant i at e a vi ew of

Chr oni cl es as hi st or i ogr aphy or t heol ogy. 31 Ther e has been ver y

l i t t l e wor k done on Chr oni cl es t hat seeks t o descr i be t he meani ng

of Chr oni c l es as a f i c t i onal wor k ( e. g. , as a novel ) .

I n Novel Hi s t or i es, Rol and Boer di scusses Chr oni cl es as

par t of hi s l ar ger wor k of met acomment ar y on t he wor ks of Geor g

Lukács and Mar t i n Not h. He r eads Chr oni cl es i n t he l i ght of

ut opi an l i t er at ur e and sci ence f i c t i on, but does so i n or der t o

st r ess “ t he sheer ar t i f i ci al i t y of any bi bl i cal r eadi ng,

par t i cul ar l y i n a post moder n cont ext ” ( 136) . He shows how

r eadi ng Chr oni cl es as ut opi an l i t er at ur e shoul d cause us t o see

Page 62: Inter Text Uality

84

ot her r eadi ngs of bi bl i cal t ext s ( such as Not h’ s The

Deut er onomi st i c Hi st or y) as si mi l ar l y ar t i f i ci al . 32 He cont r ast s

t he ut opi an or i deal I sr ael of Chr oni cl es wi t h t he dyst opi an

I sr ael of t he Deut er onomi c Hi s t or y ; he suggest s t hat by

pr esent i ng t hi s i deal past , Chr oni cl es al so pr esent s hope f or a

f ut ur e wher e t hi s i deal I sr ael wi l l be r eal i zed ( 138) . For Boer ,

Chr oni cl es “ neut r al i zes” Samuel - Ki ngs i n t he t hemes of k i ngshi p,

cul t , I s r ael and t he r ol e of God i n t he wor l d ( 151) . By l i nki ng

ut opi an l i t er at ur e wi t h sc i ence f i ct i on, he i s abl e t o suggest

t hat Chr oni c l es i s abl e t o pr esent an al t er nat i ve wor l d and an

al t er nat i ve hi st or y f or hi s communi t y ( 156) . 33 By maki ng Davi d

and Sol omon i deal i zed, t he Chr oni c l er was abl e t o enhance t he

Templ e, a Templ e t hat Boer sees as t he cent r e of l i f e i n t he

post - exi l i c communi t y ( 166) . I n hi s ear l i er wor k, Boer suggest s

t hat Chr oni c l es mar ked a shi f t f r om a r el i gi ous way of l ooki ng at

t he wor l d t o a pol i t i cal one ( Jameson 279- 284) . Thi s concept has

been ext r emel y benef i c i al t o my own t hi nki ng on t he nat ur e and

f unct i on of Chr oni cl es, t o whi ch I wi l l now t ur n.

What t hen i s my own hypot hesi s about t he genr e of

Chr oni cl es? Thr ough an exami nat i on i n t he next f our chapt er s of

t he di al ogi c r el at i onshi ps bet ween al l t he t ext s ( Chr oni cl es,

Samuel - Ki ngs, t he Cyr opaedi a, Her odot us, Ct esi as) speci f i cal l y

f ocused on t he f i gur e of t he i deal r ul er , I wi l l at t empt t o show

t hat Chr oni c l es i s a wor k of pol i t i cal phi l osophy. Because

Chr oni cl es i s set i n t he same pl ace and among t he same peopl e as

Page 63: Inter Text Uality

85

i t s aut hor ( unl i ke t he Cyr opaedi a) , i t i s t empt i ng t o descr i be

i t as hi st or i ogr aphy. However , Chr oni cl es i s ut opi an, pr esent i ng

t hat ut opi a as a hi s t or i cal f act i n or der t o j ust i f y i t s t heor i es

about l eader shi p, t he peopl e, t he cul t , and God. I t i s

t heol ogi cal , i n t hat t he r ol e of God and pr oper behavi our t owar ds

God i s ver y i mpor t ant , and i s a f act or i n l abel i ng t he i deal .

However , i t i s not pr i mar i l y t heol ogy, nor i s i t pr i mar i l y

hi st or i ogr aphy: t hese ar e t he t ool s, but not t he f i ni shed wor k.

The pur pose of t hi s di sser t at i on i s, t hen, t wo- f ol d: t o exami ne

t he di al ogi c r el at i onshi ps bet ween t ext s , and t o use t he di al ogi c

const r uct i on of t he i deal r ul er t o show t hat i n genr e, Chr oni c l es

i s ver y si mi l ar t o t he Cyr opaedi a; i t i s pol i t i cal phi l osophy.

Page 64: Inter Text Uality

86

Notes

1. St i l l and Wor t on’ s i nt r oduct i on ( “ I nt r oduct i on” ) t o t hei redi t ed vol ume on i nt er t ext ual i t y pr ov i des an excel l ent over v i ewof t he devel opment of t he concept , as wel l as some of i t s mor ei mpor t ant i ncar nat i ons.

2. Mai poi nt s out t hat Kr i st eva appr opr i at ed Bakht i n’ s i deas f orher own pur poses, and t hat Bakht i n’ s i deas may not be cl ear l yr ef l ect ed i n concept s of i nt er t ext ual i t y devel oped onl y f r omKr i s t eva’ s wor k ( 33) .

3. For a di scuss i on of t he wor ki ngs of al l us i on andi nt er t ext ual i t y i n Gr eek l i t er at ur e, especi al l y i n epi c, l yr i cand dr ama, see Hubbar d ( 33- 40) .

4. St i l l and Wor t on see Ar i s t ot el i an mi mesi s as “ t he r educt i onand hence i nt ens i f i cat i on of a mass of t ext s known t o t he poet ”( 4) .

5. Gr ay poi nt s out t hat by t he t hi r d cent ur y BCE, mi mesi s wasbei ng used t o descr i be t he desi r abl e at t r i but es of hi s t or y aswel l as t r agedy; i t was a wel l - known t echni cal t er m by t he f i r stcent ur y BCE ( 467- 68) .

6. Thi s sect i on i s an expanded ver si on of t he di scussi on ofdi al ogi sm i n my ar t i cl e “ The Di al ogi sm of Chr oni cl es” ( Mi t chel l312- 19) .

7. Hol qui s t , however , sees di al ogi sm as t he uni f yi ng f eat ur e ofBakht i n’ s wor k, so t hat al l of Bakht i n’ s var i ous wor ks can ber educed t o t he wor ki ng out of t hi s pr i nc i pl e ( 15) . Todor ov makest he l i nk bet ween di al ogi sm and i nt er t ext ual i t y ; whi l e admi t t i ngt hat Bakht i n never used t he t er m “ i nt er t ext ual i t y, ” he deci des t or eser ve “ di al ogi sm” f or speci f i c pur poses, whi l e descr i bi ng al lof Bakht i n’ s wor k on di al ogi sm under t he r ubr i c of" i nt er t ext ual i t y . ”

8. A s i mi l ar ar gument has been made by Hol qui s t ( 68- 69) .

9. Newsom, however , has ar gued t hat s i nce t her e i s not oneaut hor of t he Bi bl e, we cannot appr oach t he ent i r e Bi bl e as apol yphoni c t ext ( 296- 97) .

10. Thi s i s t he def i ni t i on of het er ogl ossi a I wi l l be usi ng,based on “ Di scour se i n t he Novel ” ( 263) . I r eal i ze t hat

Page 65: Inter Text Uality

87

het er ogl ossi a mor e of t en has connot at i ons of t he di f f er ent soc i alspeech t ypes ( al so descr i bed i n “ Di scour se” [ 263] ) . However ,s i nce i t i s ver y di f f i cul t t o f i nd such di f f er ent soci al speecht ypes i n t he Hebr ew Bi bl e, I wi l l be usi ng het er ogl oss i a t o r ef ert o t he di f f er ent genr es of speech, especi al l y i nser t ed speech,f ound i n Chr oni c l es and t he Cyr opaedi a. Unl i ke aut hor s of 19t h

cent ur y novel s ( whi ch Bakht i n st udi ed) , bi bl i cal aut hor s seem nott o have been i nt er est ed i n r epr esent i ng di f f er ent f or ms of speechi n t hei r wor ks.

11. Thus, Tat um al so l ooked at t he Cyr opaedi a as t he pr ecur sort o t he Gr eek novel ( “ Educat i on” ; c f . Bower sock 124) . Wi l l sdi scussed t he f eat ur es of t he Jewi sh novel l as of t he Hel l eni st i cper i od i n hi s ar t i cl e. I woul d suggest t hat Chr oni c l es coul d beseen as a pr ecur sor t o t he Jewi sh novel l a i n t he same way t hatt he Cyr opaedi a i s seen as t he pr ecur sor t o t he Gr eek novel l a.

12. For a di scuss i on of Bakht i n’ s eval uat i on of Lot man, see Rei d( “ Who” 327- 38, 331) , wher e he suggest s t hat i n hi s publ i shedar t i cl e Bakht i n eval uat es Lot man f ai r l y and appr ov i ngl y( “ Response” 2- 3) . Thi s i s i n cont r ast t o t he pr i vat e not es wher ehe seems t o have f undament al l y mi sunder st ood Lot man’ s wor k( “ Not es” 135; “ Met hodol ogy” 169) .

13. Bet hea suggest s t hat Bakht i n’ s i nf l uence on Lot man can bef ound begi nni ng i n t he 1980s, not t he 1970s ( 1) .

14. Even i n hi s ear l i er wor k, Lot man showed an awar eness ofcul t ur e and cul t ur al syst ems ( cf . Lot man & Pyat i gor sky) . Thi swas devel oped i n hi s l at er wor k t o t he ext ent t hat i n Uni ver se oft he Mi nd he di scussed t ext s and cul t ur e as al l par t of t hesemi ospher e, al l gener at i ng meani ng. Cf . Shukman ( 1) .

15. Fol l owi ng Jakobson’ s communi cat i on model ( 353) .

16. I n hi s ear l i er wor k, Lot man cal l s t hi s “ i nt er nal speech” or“ i nt er nal communi cat i on. ” Cf . “ Two Model s . ”

17. Ther e i s st i l l consi der abl e debat e over t he aut hor shi p oft hi s wor k: some consi der i t t he wor k of Bakht i n, ot her s t he wor kof Vol oš i nov, whi l e st i l l ot her s consi der i t mor e or l ess acol l abor at i ve ef f or t . See Hol qui s t ( 8) , Rei d ( 7- 20) ,t r ansl at or s’ pr ef ace t o Vol oši nov ( i x- xi ) .

18. See Ger a f or a di scussi on of t he cont ext of t he Cyr opaedi a( 1- 13) , cf . Due ( “ Xenophon” ) .

Page 66: Inter Text Uality

88

19. Hi r sch i s one of t he ver y f ew schol ar s who have consi der edt he Cyr opaedi a t o have hi s t or i cal usef ul ness ( Fr i endshi p 66- 70) .Cf . especi al l y hi s di scuss i on about Xenophon’ s own exper i encesand hi s sour ces ( “ 1001” 72- 73) .

20. Cont r a Lucc i oni , who consi der s t hat Xenophon was not wr i t i nga wor k of ut opi an f i ct i on but r at her pr epar i ng f or t he r enewal oft he Gr eek and “ bar bar i an” wor l ds ( 254) .

21. Except i ons among t he cl assi ci st s i ncl ude t he ar t i cl es byBr eebaar t and Wood, who bot h exami ne t he pol i t i cal phi l osophy ofXenophon. Bot h l ament t he l ack of at t ent i on pai d t o Xenophon’ sphi l osophy.

22. Pr obabl y t he best di scuss i on of t he Per si an- per i od cont extf or ear l y Judai sm i s Ber qui s t ’ s Judai sm i n Per si a’ s Shadow; t hepoi nt s I have made ar e dr awn l ar gel y f r om t hi s wor k.

23. See Gr aham, Hogl und & McKenzi e f or t he f i r s t ; Gr aham &McKenzi e f or t he second; t he t i t l e of t he t hi r d ( pr oposed book)was communi cat ed t o me by M. P. Gr aham.

24. Not e Japhet ’ s use of t he wor d “ i di osyncr at i c” t o descr i bet he Chr oni cl er ’ s hi s t or y : i t i mpl i es t hat t her e i s a “ cor r ect ”ver s i on of bi bl i cal hi st or y, whi ch t he Chr oni c l er di st or t s .Myer s seems t o be i n t he mi nor i t y when he st at es t hat t heChr oni cl er “ di d not del i ber at el y di s t or t hi s t or y t o f i t hi spur pose” ( JMM1 xxx) .

25. Cf . Japhet , “ [ The Chr oni c l er ’ s phi l osophy] i s f ounded on af i r m bel i ef i n t he power of r easoni ng and per suasi on, appeal i ngt o t he under st andi ng and goodwi l l of t he ot her par t y . Theseel ement s of di al ogue, r easoni ng and per suasi on ar e mani f est i nChr oni cl es i n ever y f or m and l evel of i nt er r el at i onshi p [ …] ” ( SJ37- 38) .

26. The Chr oni c l er ’ s ver s i on of event s was not uni ver sal l yaccept ed by ot her aut hor s i n t he l at e Second Templ e per i od. BenZvi ’ s ar t i cl e ( “ Aut hor i t y” ) on t he use of t he Deut er onomi cHi st or y and Chr oni cl es i n l at e Second Templ e wr i t i ngs concl udest hat most aut hor s t ook t hei r ver si on of hi st or y f r om Samuel - Ki ngsand not Chr oni cl es; onl y Josephus consi s t ent l y used Chr oni cl es asa sour ce ( 73- 76) .

27. “ No one deni es t hat Her odot us has unr el i abl e st or i es i n hi sHi st or i a, but nei t her does one deny t hat hi s book i s a hi s t or y

Page 67: Inter Text Uality

89

nor t hat i t s aut hor shoul d be consi der ed a hi s t or i an” ( Kal i mi ,“ Hi s t or i an” 85) .

28. Cf . Ben Zvi ( “ Bui l di ng” ) , Knopper s ( “ Hi st or y” ) . Myer s i s anexampl e of an ear l i er schol ar who accept s many of t he hi st or i calc l ai ms of t he Chr oni cl er .

29. Cf . Wi l l i , who sees Chr oni c l es not as a cont i nuat i on oft r adi t i on but i nt er pr et at i on of t r adi t i ons f or cur r ent r eal i t i es,a “ pr ospect i ve hi s t or i ogr aphy” t hat r et el l s t he past whi l espeaki ng about t he pr esent ( 148) .

30. However , Shaver has di sput ed t hat i t was t he Tor ah ( Genesi s-Number s) t hat was aut hor i t at i ve f or t he Chr oni cl er . I nst ead, hear gues t hat Deut er onomi c l aw was mor e i mpor t ant ( 124- 125) .

31. So al so de Vr i es ( “ For ms” ) , who per f or ms an anal ysi s of t hepr ophet i c speeches i n Chr oni cl es, showi ng t hat t he speeches gi vet heol ogi cal comment on t he nar r at i ve cont ent . Cf . Kal i mi , whosees many of t he Chr oni c l er ’ s changes t o t he sour ce t ext asmot i vat ed by a desi r e f or har moni zat i on, and r educes t he l i t er ar yf eat ur es of t he t ext t o a sear ch f or t ext ual hi s t or y( “ Cont r i but i on” ) or hi st or i ogr aphi c met hod ( “ Li t er ar y” ) .

32. He suggest s, “ I f i t i s st r ange t o r ead Chr oni cl es as ut opi anl i t er at ur e or as sci ence f i c t i on, t hen i t i s equal l y s t r ange f orNot h t o r ead Deut er onomy- Ki ngs as a ‘ Deut er onomi st i c Hi s t or y ’ ,as, i n ot her wor ds, a hi st or i cal novel ” ( Boer , Novel 136- 137) .

33. One of t he most seduct i ve aspect s of Boer ’ s ar gument i s t hatt he l avi shness of t he descr i pt i on of t he Templ e cul t i s acompl et e f i c t i on – i t r epr esent s t he compl et e l ack of such al avi shness i n t he Chr oni cl er ’ s day, and a t ype of wi sh-f ul f i l l ment ( Novel 160- 61) .