Vanidad y caza de vientos

Una lectura del libro de Cohélet.

Authors

  • Nathan Stone Wilkinson Universidad Católica del Norte.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.22199/S07198175.2009.0001.00002

Keywords:

Cohelet, Wisdom, Vanity

Abstract

The book of Cohelet (Ecclesiastes) has always been difficult to interpret, because the reader doesn’t know how to receive the categorical skepticism. This article proposes that Cohelet is a literary character, and that the genre is dramatic monologue. The work itself, then, makes fun of the extremely “wise” posture of its character, thus questioning the pretense of the wisdom tradition as such.

Author Biography

Nathan Stone Wilkinson, Universidad Católica del Norte.

Departamento Teología.

References

MAGGIONI, BRUNO. (1993) Job y Cohélet. Bilbao: DDB, 53, 57, 68.

CRENSHAW, JAMES. (1981) Old Testament Wisdom. Atlanta: John Knox Press, 126, 128-129, 138.

BONORA, ANTONIO. (1994) Guía Espiritual del AT. Barcelona: Herder, 40, 75.

CRENSHAW, JAMES. (1988) Ecclesiastés. London: SCM Press, 22, 25-26, 29-30, 34-37.

WILLIAMS, JAMES. (1970) What does it Profit a Man? The Wisdom of Koheleth" (1970). [s.n.]: Crenshaw, 375-389. EN: Studies in Ancient Israelite Wisdom.

Published

2009-06-30

How to Cite

Stone Wilkinson, N. (2009). Vanidad y caza de vientos: Una lectura del libro de Cohélet. Cuadernos De teología - Universidad Católica Del Norte (On Line), 1(1), 14-21. https://doi.org/10.22199/S07198175.2009.0001.00002

Issue

Section

Papers