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Remembering Paul: Ancient and Modern Contests over the Image of the Apostle

Autor Benjamin L. White
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 27 apr 2017
Who was Paul of Tarsus? Radical visionary of a new age? Gender-liberating progressive? Great defender of orthodoxy? In Remembering Paul, Benjamin L. White offers a critique of early Christian claims about the "real" Paul in the second century C.E.-a period in which apostolic memory was highly contested-and sets these ancient contests alongside their modern counterpart: attempts to rescue the "historical" Paul from his "canonical" entrapments.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780190669577
ISBN-10: 0190669578
Pagini: 378
Dimensiuni: 231 x 155 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.52 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States

Recenzii

This is an important book. Even if one vigorously disagrees, no serious scholar of Paul can ignore this work. ... brilliant, provocative...[I] applaud White's insight, creativity, and genius.
Remembering Paul... is an excellent example of recent trends to reconceive the Paul of Pauline studies...Its theoretical and methodological investments bring readers (and Paul) into fascinating conversation with a diverse set of thinkers...All scholars of the reception of Paul and Pauline texts will benefit greatly from White s work.
Simply put, this work represents by far the most important book on Paul in some decades. "It is the first book-length study that uses social memory to study Paul, and it challenges the foundational assumptions of the modern study of Paul and of Christian origins. Benjamin White writes beautifully and clearly, and he argues his case, in my opinion, flawlessly."
The overall thrust of this book articulates a reorientation to Pauline reception with which future scholars must contend."
Remarkably insightful and forward looking for a scholar's first book."
The implications of this brilliant book are massive."
This book fills an enormous gap in Pauline scholarship by showing how collective memory has produced a variety of views of Paul that provide meaningful pasts for the present. It deconstructs especially the 'Paul' handed down to us by Luther, Baur, and nineteenth-century German Protestant scholarship. A must read for anyone interested in Paul!"
With a methodological sensitivity familiar from the 'remembered Jesus', White exposes the pervasive influence of the nineteenth-century narrative of a 'real Paul' against whom later traditions are graded according to their success or failure in 'correctly' understanding him, and offers instead a richly textured account capturing the importance of social location, rhetorical intention, and contextual construction in the reception of Paul as part of early Christian identity-making. Remembering Paul will become the new norm on which further work must build."
This sparkling and enjoyable study offers the first full-length treatment of the Apostle Paul through the lens of second-century 'social memory'. Benjamin White urges Questers for 'the Historical Paul' to adopt Jesus scholarship's move from abstractly archaeological methods to a historical imagination attuned to memory's more integrated tissue of recurrent themes
an engaging and wide-ranging work... a bold and ambitious book, and its author is not reticent in making sweeping claims about what he seeks to do. Thus, for example, he sets out not only to shed new light on how Paul was portrayed in certain second-century contexts, but also to begin to re-orientate the whole field of Pauline studies, reminding all interpreters of Paul of their own social and historical location, and doing for the 'remembered Paul' what others have done for the 'remembered Jesus'... I certainly learned from this book and I am glad to commend it to others.
Benjamin White's new study of Paul is sure to provoke considerable interest

Notă biografică

Benjamin L. White is Assistant Professor of Religion at Clemson University where he specializes in ancient and modern interpretations of the New Testament, the reconstruction of Christian origins, and the development of early Christianities. He received a Ph.D. in Ancient Mediterranean Religions from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.