The essays in this work examine issues related to authority, identity, or change in religious and philosophical traditions of the third century CE. This century is of particular interest because of the political and cultural developments and conflicts that occurred during this period, which in turn drastically changed the social and religious landscape of the Roman world. The specific focus of this volume edited by Jordan D. Rosenblum, Lily Vuong, and Nathaniel DesRosiers is to explore these major creative movements and to examine their strategies for developing and designating orthodoxies and orthopraxies. Contributors were encouraged to analyze or construct the intersections between parallel religious and philosophical communities of the third century, including points of contact either between or among Jews, Christians, pagans, and philosophers. As a result, the discussions of the material contained within this volume are both comparative in nature and interdisciplinary in approach, engaging participants who work in the fields of Religious Studies, Philosophy, History and Archaeology. The overall goal was to explore dialogues between individuals or groups that illuminate the mutual competition and influence that was extant among them, and to put forth a general methodological framework for the study of these ancient dialogues. These religious and philosophical dialogues are not only of great interest and import in their own right, but they also can help us to understand how later cultural and religious developments unfolded.
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Zustand: Wie Neu. Zustandsbeschreibung: leichte Lagerspuren/minor shelfwear. Edited by Jordan D. Rosenblum, Lily Vuong and Nathaniel P. DesRosiers. 17 essays examine issues related to authority, identity, or change in religious and philosophical traditions of the third century CE, with a specific focus on the major creative movements, analyzing their strategies for developing and designating orthodoxies and orthopraxies. Contributors were encouraged to analyze or construct the intersections between parallel religious and philosophical communities of the third century, including points of contact either between or among Jews, Christians, pagans, and philosophers. As a result, the discussions of the material contained within this volume are both comparative in nature and interdisciplinary in approach, engaging participants who work in the fields of Religious Studies, Philosophy, History and Archaeology. The essays are structured into three chapters: I. Assessing religious competition in the third century: methods and approaches. II. Ritual space and practice. III. Modes of competition. From the table of contents: Daniel C. Ullucci: What did he say? The ideas of religious experts and the 99%. - Heidi Marx-Wolf: Pythagoras the Theurgist: Porphyry and Iamblichus on the role of ritual in the philosophical life. - Arthur P. Urbano: Narratives of decline and renewal in the writing of philosophical history. - Steven J. Larson: The trouble with religious tolerance in Roman antiquity. - Kevin M. McGinnis: Sanctifying interpretation: the Christian interpreter as priest in origen. - Andrew B. McGowan: Cyprian and early Christian constructions of sacrifice. - Gregg E. Gardner: Competitive giving in the third century CE: early rabbinic approaches to Greco-Roman civic benefaction. - Nathaniel P. DesRosiers: Oath and anti-oath: alternating forms of community building in the third century. - Jordan D. Rosenblum/Daniel C. Ullucci: Qualifying rabbinic ritual agents: cognitive science and the early rabbinic kitchen. - Lily C. Vuong: The Temple persists: collective memories of the Jewish Temple in Christian narrative imagination. - Jacob A. Latham: Battling bishops, the Roman aristocracy, and the contestation of civic space in late antique Rome. - Karen B. Stern: Inscription as religious competition in third-century Syria. - Gil P. Klein: Spatial struggle: intercity relations and topography of intra-rabbinic-competition. - Ari Finkelstein: The use of Jews in Julian's program: "dying for the law" in the Letter to Theodorus: a case study. - Todd S. Berzon: Heresiology as ethnography: theorising Christian difference. - Todd C. Krulak: The Damascian dichotomy: contention and concord in the history of late Platonism. - Ross S. Kraemer: Gendering (the) competition: religious competition in the third century: Jews, Christians, and the Greco-Roman world. 257 Seiten, gebunden (Journal of Ancient Judaism. Supplements; Vol. 15/Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht 2014). Statt EUR 95,00. Gewicht: 572 g - Gebunden/Gebundene Ausgabe. Artikel-Nr. 110749
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gebundene Ausgabe. Zustand: Sehr gut. 257 Seiten englisch - Leichte äußere Mängel - Buch ist als Mängelexemplar gekennzeichnet - Buch ansonsten in sehr gutem und ungelesenem Zustand - Jeder Lieferung liegt eine ordentliche Rechnung mit ausgewiesener MwSt. bei Sprache: Englisch Gewicht in Gramm: 600. Artikel-Nr. 196905
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Zustand: New. 2014. Supplement. hardcover. . . . . . Books ship from the US and Ireland. Artikel-Nr. V9783525550687
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