In this commentary, Joshua Berman considers Lamentations as a literary
work that creates meaning for a community in the wake of tragedy through
its repudiation of Zion theology. Drawing from studies in collective
trauma, his volume is the first study of Lamentations that
systematically accounts for the constructed character of the narrator, a
pastoral mentor who engages in a series of dialogues with a second
constructed character, daughter Zion, who embodies the traumatized
community of survivors. In each chapter, the pastoral mentor speaks to a
different religious typology and a different sub-community of
post-destruction Judeans, working with daughter Zion to reconsider her
errant positions and charting for her a positive way forward to
reconnecting with the Lord. Providing a systematic approach to the
careful structure of each of its chapters, Berman illuminates how
biblical writers offered support to their communities in a way that is
still relevant and appealing to a therapy-conscious contemporary
society.