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Mitchell Dahood (1922–1982)

Author of Psalms I: 1-50 (The Anchor Bible)

10+ Works 1,261 Members 4 Reviews

About the Author

Works by Mitchell Dahood

Psalms I: 1-50 (The Anchor Bible) (1965) — Translator — 436 copies, 2 reviews
Psalms II: 51-100 (The Anchor Bible) (1968) — Translator — 361 copies, 1 review
Psalms III: 101-150 (The Anchor Bible) (1970) — Translator — 336 copies, 1 review

Associated Works

Near Eastern Studies in Honor of William Foxwell Albright (1971) — Contributor — 17 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1922-02-02
Date of death
1982-03-08
Gender
male
Education
Johns Hopkins University (PhD|Semitics|1951)
Occupations
priest
Organizations
Society of Jesus
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Anaconda, Montana, USA
Places of residence
Concord, New Hampshire, USA
Place of death
Rome, Italy
Associated Place (for map)
USA

Members

Reviews

4 reviews
My husband bought me this set of Psalms commentaries (this is the first volume of three) for my birthday this year and I was so excited to receive them. I had added them to my book wish-list after having listened to a series of Old and New Testament lectures Yale offers for free on their YouTube channel. I wanted to read a commentary that was written from a more scholarly and historical point of view rather than primarily theological.

This series includes both a new translation of the psalms show more as well as commentary on the text. Professor Dahood used the Ugaritic texts to inform the translation by working with said texts to help bring context for certain words and phrases that translators have disagreed about or not had much information on in past translations. The result is an interesting, fresh (though still familiar for the avid Psalms reader) translation that I thoroughly enjoyed reading.

The commentary sections were insightful, though a bit over my head at times. Multiple languages were used throughout the notes. With this in mind, I think that the commentary sections would be best appreciated by someone who knows the various biblical languages, has done translation work, and will thus be able to understand the full context of the notes. There is much of value for the lay reader as well, but you might, as I did, feel a bit lost at times and have to pick through the more scholarly language to find the parts that make the most sense to you.

All in all, I thought it was a worthy work and I look forward to reading the next two volumes.
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Statistics

Works
10
Also by
1
Members
1,261
Popularity
#20,345
Rating
½ 3.5
Reviews
4
ISBNs
15

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