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  1. Perceiving the other in ancient Judaism and early Christianity
    Contributor: Bar Asher Sigal, Mikhal (HerausgeberIn); Grünstäudl, Wolfgang (HerausgeberIn); Thiessen, Matthew (HerausgeberIn)
    Published: 2017
    Publisher:  Mohr Siebeck, Tübingen

    Der vorliegende Sammelband untersucht literarische Darstellungen von »Anderen«, das heißt Personen und Gruppen, die nicht dem eigenen religiösen und/oder ethnischen Kontext zugerechnet werden können, innerhalb des antiken Judentums und Christentums.... more

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    Universitätsbibliothek der Eberhard Karls Universität
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    Der vorliegende Sammelband untersucht literarische Darstellungen von »Anderen«, das heißt Personen und Gruppen, die nicht dem eigenen religiösen und/oder ethnischen Kontext zugerechnet werden können, innerhalb des antiken Judentums und Christentums. In welcher Art und Weise werden diese Anderen präsentiert und welchen Anliegen dient die Auseinandersetzung mit ihnen? Dieser Band achtet dabei besonders auf die methodologischen Herausforderungen in der Auswertung des vielgestaltigen historischen Quellenmaterials und trägt so zu einem vertieften Verständnis der Beziehungen zwischen unterschiedlichen religiösen Gruppierungen in der Antike bei.InhaltsübersichtAlbert I. Baumgarten: An Ancient Debate of Disciples – Matthew Thiessen: Gentiles as Impure Animals in the Writings of Early Christ Followers – Nathan Eubank: Damned Disciples: The Permeability of the Boundary between Insiders and Outsiders in Matthew and Paul – Tobias Nicklas: Creating the Other: The »Jews« in the Gospel of John: Past and Future Lines of Scholarship – Wolfgang Grünstäudl: Instant Polemics: Use and Reuse of Charges against Others in Early Christianity – Patricia A. Duncan: The Case for Tolerance in the Early Christian (Pseudo-Clementine) Novel – Katell Berthelot: The Paradoxical Similarities between the Jews and the Roman Other – Isaiah M. Gafni: Various »Others« in Rabbinic Literature: Between Babylonia and the Land of Israel – Haim Weiss: The Bodily Images of Shimon Bar Kosibah in Rabbinic Literature – Michal Bar-Asher Siegal: »The Best of Them Is like a Brier«: On b. 'Eruvin 101a and the Jewish-Christian Dialogue in the Babylonian Talmud – Christine Hayes: The Complicated Goy in Classical Rabbinic Sources The present volume reexamines both ancient Christian and Jewish portrayals of outsiders. In what ways, both positive and negative, do ancient writers interact with and relate to those outside of their ethnicity or religious tradition? This volume devotes itself to the methodological questions surrounding the use of diverse ancient sources for the construction of the other. The goal is to shed new light on ancient interactions between different religious groups in order to describe more accurately these relationships.Survey of contentsAlbert I. Baumgarten: An Ancient Debate of Disciples – Matthew Thiessen: Gentiles as Impure Animals in the Writings of Early Christ Followers – Nathan Eubank: Damned Disciples: The Permeability of the Boundary between Insiders and Outsiders in Matthew and Paul – Tobias Nicklas: Creating the Other: The »Jews« in the Gospel of John: Past and Future Lines of Scholarship – Wolfgang Grünstäudl: Instant Polemics: Use and Reuse of Charges against Others in Early Christianity – Patricia A. Duncan: The Case for Tolerance in the Early Christian (Pseudo-Clementine) Novel – Katell Berthelot: The Paradoxical Similarities between the Jews and the Roman Other – Isaiah M. Gafni: Various »Others« in Rabbinic Literature: Between Babylonia and the Land of Israel – Haim Weiss: The Bodily Images of Shimon Bar Kosibah in Rabbinic Literature – Michal Bar-Asher Siegal: »The Best of Them Is like a Brier«: On b. 'Eruvin 101a and the Jewish-Christian Dialogue in the Babylonian Talmud – Christine Hayes: The Complicated Goy in Classical Rabbinic Sources

     

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  2. Colometric Analysis of Paul's Letters
    Methodological Foundations and Application to 2 Corinthians 10–13
    Published: 2023
    Publisher:  Mohr Siebeck, Tübingen

    Am Beispiel von 2. Korinther 10–13 untersucht Priscille Marschall, inwieweit der Stil des Paulus den antiken Konventionen der Gliederung griechischer Prosatexte in »côla« und »Perioden« entspricht. Die Autorin zeigt auch, wie die Berücksichtigung der... more

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    Am Beispiel von 2. Korinther 10–13 untersucht Priscille Marschall, inwieweit der Stil des Paulus den antiken Konventionen der Gliederung griechischer Prosatexte in »côla« und »Perioden« entspricht. Die Autorin zeigt auch, wie die Berücksichtigung der Kolometrie den Exegeten bei der Behandlung von Fragen der Zeichensetzung helfen kann.InhaltsübersichtIntroduction Chapter 1: Ancient Colometry and the New Testament: Status Quaestionis and Aims of this Study Chapter 2: Côla, Commata, and Periods: The Data from the Rhetorical Treatises Chapter 3: Towards a Method of Colometric Analysis Chapter 4: Essay of a Colometric Analysis of 2 Cor 10–13 Chapter 5: Re-punctuating Paul's Letters in Light of their Colometric Structure Conclusion Priscille Marschall focuses on a hitherto neglected aspect of the study of the elocutio of Paul's letters: colometry, i.e., the way in which ancient authors used to structure their orality-oriented compositions into »côla« (κῶλα) and »periods« (περίοδοι). Based on a thorough study of rhetorical treatises from the Greco-Roman world, the author first develops a set of criteria for delineating the côla and the periods. Using 2 Corinthians 10–13 as a case study, she then examines the extent to which Paul's style complies with the conventions of structuring prose outlined by the ancient rhetoricians. Lastly, she explores the links between colometric structure and punctuation, showing how colometric analysis can inform exegetical debates related to segmentation issues and questioning how we might (re)punctuate Paul's letters in order to render something of their oral logic of structuration.Survey of contentsIntroduction Chapter 1: Ancient Colometry and the New Testament: Status Quaestionis and Aims of this Study Chapter 2: Côla, Commata, and Periods: The Data from the Rhetorical Treatises Chapter 3: Towards a Method of Colometric Analysis Chapter 4: Essay of a Colometric Analysis of 2 Cor 10–13 Chapter 5: Re-punctuating Paul's Letters in Light of their Colometric Structure Conclusion

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9783161625558
    Other identifier:
    RVK Categories: BC 7300
    Series: Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament 2. Reihe
    Subjects: Feminist Studies; Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament 2. Reihe; Frame Semantics; Ian McEwan; Hellenistic And Roman Religion; Paul's letters; Ancient Rhetoric; Punctuation; stylistic / elocutio; Colometric Analysis; 2 Corinthians 10–13; colometry; orality / aurality; Neues Testament; antike politische Philosophie
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (XVIII, 344 Seiten)
  3. Consistency Isn't Everything
    Self-Commendation in 2 Corinthians
    Published: [2018]

    This article addresses the debate over Paul's use of self-commendation in 2 Corinthians. The diversity of instances in which Paul promotes himself within this text - whereby he in some cases commends himself explicitly (2 Cor. 1.12; 4.2; 6.4), denies... more

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    This article addresses the debate over Paul's use of self-commendation in 2 Corinthians. The diversity of instances in which Paul promotes himself within this text - whereby he in some cases commends himself explicitly (2 Cor. 1.12; 4.2; 6.4), denies that he is doing so in others (3.1; 5.12; 12.19) and elsewhere claims that he is compelled to boast (11.1-12.13) - raises the question of whether Paul's practice regarding self-commendation is guided by a coherent set of principles, or is simply self-contradictory. Beginning with an analysis of a representative sample of each ‘species' of self-commendation, this study argues that, although Paul does have certain principles regarding self-commendation that he attempts to apply with a measure of consistency, he is more than willing to bend or suspend his own ‘rules' in order to suit his more pressing rhetorical concerns.

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Article (journal)
    Format: Online
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    Parent title: Enthalten in: Journal for the study of the New Testament; London : Sage, 1978; 40(2018), 3, Seite 360-382; Online-Ressource

    Subjects: 2 Corinthians; AUTHORSHIP; BIBLE. Corinthians, 2nd; Boasting; DEBATES & debating; PAULINE churches; Paul's letters; Pauline rhetoric; RHETORICAL questions; consistency; self-commendation
  4. Recasting Moses
    The Memory of Moses in Biographical and Autobiographical Narratives in Ancient Judaism and 4th-Century Christianity
    Published: 2013
    Publisher:  Peter Lang GmbH, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften, Frankfurt

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  5. Recasting Moses
    the memory of Moses in biographical and autobiographical narratives in ancient Judaism and 4th-century Christianity
    Published: 2013
    Publisher:  Lang-Ed., Frankfurt, M.

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