I asked which literary critics claim the bible or quran is great literature.
No answer.
Seriously... do you know the slightest thing about literature at all? Literary criticism of the Bible exists in such a vast quantity that I doubt even Shakespearean criticism can rival it. Literary Criticism... not religious or theological criticism. Nearly any university in the US... quite probably in the West in general... is certain to offer a course on the Bible as Literature and/or include Biblical texts in any World Literature Survey courses. Among the books which discuss the "great books" and offer suggested essential reading lists, nearly every one includes The Bible or specific Biblical texts. These might include: How to Read a Book by Mortimer J. Adler and Charles Van Doren, The Western Canon by Harold Bloom, Great Books by David Denby, The Lifetime Reading Plan by Clifton Fadiman and John S. Major, Good Reading: A Guide for Serious Readers, Waldhorn, Weber, and Zeiger, editors, Choice of Books by Sir John Lubbock, etc... There are any number of contemporary critics of the Bible as literature including Robert Alter, David Rosenberg, and Richard Elliott Friedman. Beyond the realm of the critic, there are endless Modern writers who have been inspired by Biblical texts... something that speaks volumes about their admiration for the Bible as literature. Among these you might include T.S. Eliot, J.L. Borges, Franz Kafka, Rilke, Nikos Kazantzakis, Michail Bulgakov, etc... etc... Add to this the continual literary translations of the Bible and/or Biblical texts: Robert Alter's The Five Books of Moses, The David Story, and The Book of Psalms, Stephen Mitchell's Job, Chana and Ariel Bloch's and Robert Graves Song of Songs, David Rosenberg's Poet's Bible and Book of David, and David Curzon's anthology, The Gospels in Our Image, which collects modern and contemporary poems structured upon Biblical texts (which again suggests a certain admiration in the poets) and includes poets such as J.L. Borges, D.H. Lawrence, Marina Tsvetaeva, Wislawa Symborska, William Butler Yeats, Rilke, Primo Levi, T.S. Eliot, Czeslaw Milosz, W.H. Auden, Thomas Disch, Richard Wilbur, Anthony Hecht, W.S. Merwin, Dylan Thomas, Paul Celan, Boris Pasternak, Thomas Hardy, etc... Beyond writers there are endless modern composers, painters, and film-makers who were equally inspired by Biblical literature... even when they themselves were agnostics or atheists. But all of these people are but fools. You... the great iconoclast (wannabe) know so much better. The fact of the matter is that your inability to see any aesthetic merit in the Biblical texts stems from your own admitted hatred of religion (enough so to make it plain in your very screen name) that itself verges on a form of racism.
By the way... its intriguing that you can call me out on the fact that I did not offer a list of critics and others who recognize the Bible as great literature (I simply felt that the claim was somewhat embarrassing and beneath acknowledgment) and yet you make some wild claim about the superiority of some vague Latin text that served as the basis for Julius Ceasar... and was clearly so much better than Shakespeare's book... and yet you cannot even think of what it was? Is this the intellectual acumen at work of which you spoke so confidently?



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Guess what? In case no one has told you ART IS ELITIST. Deal with it. The opinions of Joe the Plumber are completely irrelevant to whether Shakespeare or Mozart or Flavor Flav will last through the centuries.
