The SBL handbook of style for ancient near eastern, biblical, and early christian studies.

AuthorBeckman, Gary
PositionReview

The SBL Handbook of Style for Ancient Near Eastern, Biblical, and Early Christian Studies. Edited by PATRICK H. ALEXANDER, JOHN F. KUTSKO, JAMES D. ERNEST, SHIRLEY A. DECKER-LUCKE, and DAVID L. PETERSEN. Peabody, Mass.: HENDRICKSON PUBLISHERS, 1999. Pp. xiv + 280. $24.95.

This collaborative handbook for authors composing manuscripts in several fields of ancient studies treats many topics covered in The Chicago Manual of Style (fourteenth edition, 1993), although it does not follow the latter in devoting extensive coverage to the technical aspects of book production. Thus there are general sections here on preparation and submission of a work (Responsibilities of an Author. chapter 3), on General Style (chapter 4), on Indexes and Bibliographies (chapter 6). and on Notes and Bibliographies (chapter 7).

On the other hand, material concerning "Transliterating and Transcribing Ancient Texts" (chapter 5) and "Abbreviations" (chapter 8) has been tailored to the volume's specialized audience. The latter section is invaluable: it includes standard lists of abbreviations for the Dead Sea Scrolls (8.3.5), Philo (8.3.6), and the Mishnah, Talmud, etc. (8.3.8). The sixty-three page listing of "Secondary Sources" is helpfully organized in two ways: first alphabetically by title of the source (8.4.1), and then by abbreviation (8.4.2).

Many of the appendices will be particularly useful to Biblical scholars: "Capitalization and Spelling Examples" (appendix A), "Ancient Near Eastern Dates and Periods" (appendix B), "Ezra Traditions" (appendix C)...

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