's distribution of materials by source of the first four books of the
Hebrew Bible, including a redactor (black), according to the
documentary hypothesis On occasion, the persons performing the redaction (the redactors) add brief elements of their own. The reasons for doing so are varied and can include the addition of elements to adjust the underlying conclusions of the text to suit the redactor's opinion, adding bridging elements to integrate disparate stories, or to add a
frame story, such as the tale of
Scheherazade which frames the collection of folk tales in
The Book of One Thousand and One Nights. Sometimes the
source texts are interlaced, particularly when discussing closely related details, things, or people. This is common when source texts contain alternative versions of the same story, and slight alterations are often made in this circumstance, simply to make the texts appear to agree, and thus the resulting redacted text appears to be coherent. Such a situation is proposed by the
documentary hypothesis in the
academic field of
biblical scholarship, which affirms that multiple redactions occurred during the
composition of the Torah, often combining source texts with different narratives, which have rival political attitudes and aims, together; another example is the
Talmud. Redactional processes are documented in numerous disciplines, including
ancient literary works and biblical studies. Much has been written on the role of redaction in creating meaning for texts in various formats. ==See also==