A lament is a literary genre that gives voice to experiences of suffering, loss, or frustration. It uses direct language to describe what has gone wrong and how that situation feels to the speaker. Laments often follow recognizable patterns, such as stating the problem, expressing emotional response, and calling attention to the seriousness of the situation. As a literary form, lament allows difficult experiences to be articulated clearly and publicly, preserving them as part of shared memory or tradition. Its function is to name distress rather than resolve it, providing a structured way to communicate pain, protest, or grief.
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References
- Niditch, Susan, The Responsive Self: Personal Religion in Biblical Literature of the Neo-Babylonian and Persian Periods
- De Troyer, Kristin, "'When She Ended Her Prayer': A Study of the Relationship between the Hebrew and the Greek Texts of the Book of Esther" in Reif, Stefan C., et al. (eds.) On Wings of Prayer: Sources of Jewish Worship: Essays in Honor of Professor Stefan C. Reif on the Occasion of His Seventy-Fifth Birthday
- Brayford, Susan, Septuagint Commentary Series: Genesis
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