Narkissos....Another good example is how 2 Peter 2:11 obliterates Jude 9's explicit reference to the burial of Moses as related in the Testament of Moses and/or the Assumption of Moses. Baukham shows that in most cases, the Enochic allusions in Jude are obscured in 2 Peter.
IP_SEC, Shakita....I'm sure there is an introductory level book on the subject. Right now the best and most up-to-date scholarly work on the subject is The Canon Debate (copyright 2002), edited by LH McDonald and JA Sanders. Chapters include "The Notion and Definition of Canon," "The Formation of the Hebrew Bible Canon: Isaiah as a Test Case," "The Septuagint: The Bible of Hellenistic Judaism," "Questions of Canon As Viewed Through the Dead Sea Scrolls," "Origins of a tripartite Old Testament Canon," Jamnia Revisited," "The Rabbi's Bible: The Canon of the Hebrew Bible and the Rabbis", "The Scriptures of Jesus and His Earliest Followers", "The Old Testament Apocrypha in the Early Church and Today," "The Pseudegrapha in the Early Church", "The Codex and Canon Consciousness", "The Issue of Closure in the Canonical Process", "The New Testament Canon: Recent Research", "Factors Leading to the Selection and Closure of the New Testament Canon", "Marcion Revisted", "Gnosticism and the Christian Bible", "Evidence For an Early Christian Canon", "The New Testament Canon of Eusebius", "The Muratonian Fragment and the Origins of the New Testament", "Identifying Scripture and Canon in the Early Church", "The Problem of Pseudenymity in Biblical Literature", and so forth. It looks like a very comprehensive book, tho advanced, with contributions by many important scholars including Philip R. Davies, Joseph Blenkinsopp, James VanderKam, Emanuel Tov, William Farmer, and so forth. It's one of the books I plan to get, once I have enough money.
onacruse....I think it comes back down to the old question of what the Bible is supposed to represent. Is it to be identified with the "Word of God", is it meditations on God and morality, a combination of both, or ????.