Paul as homo novus
Authorial Strategies of Self-Fashioning in Light of a Ciceronian Term, Studia Aarhusiana Neotestiamentica - SANt 006, Part
Eve-Marie Becker/Jacob P B Mortensen
This collection of articles deals with diverse perceptions of the ancient concept of a homo novus that was most prominently coined and developed in the political writings of Cicero. The contributors follow various literary and socio-political adaptions of the concept - from Cicero onwards in authors like Paul, Horace, Tacitus, Seneca, Athanasius, and Augustine.
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Zusatztext
20ths century research in St. Paul is widely impacted by Adolf Deissmanns prominent view on the apostle as a homo novus (1911). But where does this concept originate from, and what does it imply? This collection of articles does not only re-evaluate Deissmanns concept by tracing it back to its historical and socio-political origins in Cicero and exploring how authors from (early) Imperial Time perceive and transform the homo novus paradigm by diverse modes and strategies of literary self-fashioning. Scholars ranging the fields of New Testament Studies, Greek and Latin Philology, Ancient History, Patristics, and Comparative Literature also examine how the Ciceronian paradigm was early on transformed, disseminated, and applied as a literary concept and an authorial topos of self-molding. One of the leading questions throughout the volume thus is: How do authors like Cicero, Horace, Paul, Tacitus, Seneca, Athanasius, and Augustine fashion themselves in accordance to or in difference from the idea of being a new man? It is argued that by means of literary self-configuration, indeed, some of these writers - such as Paul and Augustine - want to appear as new men by either altering traditional social, moral, religious, or political roles, or by creating new patterns of social behavior and religious self-understanding.
Autorenportrait
<p>Dr. theol. Eve-Marie Becker is Professor for New Testament exegesis at Aarhus University, Denmark.</p>
Weitere Details
Erschienen: 16.04.2018
Umfang: 350 S.
Sprache: ENG
Einband: GEB
Format: 2.8 x 23.7 x 16.7 cm
ISBN/EAN: 9783525540480
Umbreit-Nr.: 1048507
