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The Fourth Gospel in First-Century Media Culture: The Library of New Testament Studies

Editat de Anthony Le Donne, Professor Tom Thatcher
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 7 noi 2012
Werner Kelber's The Oral and the Written Gospel substantially challenged predominant paradigms for understanding early Jesus traditions and the formation of written Gospels. Since that publication, a more precise and complex picture of first-century media culture has emerged. Yet while issues of orality, aurality, performance, and mnemonics are now well voiced in Synoptic Studies, Johannine scholars remain largely unaware of such issues and their implications. The highly respected contributors to this book seek to fill this lacuna by exploring various applications of orality, literacy, memory, and performance theories to the Johannine Literature in hopes of opening new avenues for future discussion.

Part 1 surveys the scope of the field by introducing the major themes of ancient media studies and noting their applicability to the Fourth Gospel and the Johannine Epistles. Part 2 analyzes major themes in the Johannine Literature from a media perspective, while Part 3 features case studies of specific texts. Two responses by Gail O'Day and Barry Schwartz complete the volume.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780567375155
ISBN-10: 0567375153
Pagini: 296
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 16 mm
Greutate: 0.41 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția T&T Clark
Seria The Library of New Testament Studies

Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom

Caracteristici

Advances the study of First-Century media culture and its affect on the Fourth Gospel

Notă biografică

Anthony Le Donne (PhD, Durham University) is Assistant Professor of New Testament and Second Temple Judaism at Lincoln Christian University, Lincoln, Illinois. He is the author of The Historiographical Jesus: Memory, Typology, and the Son of David (Baylor University Press, 2009) and Historical Jesus: What Can We Know and How Can We Know It? (Eerdmans, 2010). Together with Jacob Neusner and Bruce Chilton he is co-editing Soundings in Jesus and His Religion (Fortress, forthcoming in 2011). His home on the web is anthonyledonne.com. Tom Thatcher is Professor of Biblical Studies at Cincinnati Christian University. He has authored or edited numerous books and articles on the Johannine Literature and early Christian media culture, including Memory, Tradition, and Text (with Alan Kirk; SBL 2005), Why John Wrote a Gospel (WJK 2006), and Jesus, the Voice, and the Text (Baylor University Press 2008). A co-founder and former chair of the 'Mapping Memory' research group in the Society of Biblical Literature, Tom now serves on the programme committee of the SBL's Bible in Ancient and Modern Media section.

Cuprins

Part I: John and Oral Culture

Introducing Media Culture to Johannine Studies: Orality, Performance, and Memory Anthony Le Donne and Tom Thatcher
Seeing, Hearing, Declaring, Writing: Media Dynamics in the Letters of John Jeffrey E. Brickle
The Riddle of the Baptist and the Genesis of the Prologue: John 1:1-18 in Oral/Aural Media Culture Tom Thatcher
A Performance of the Text: The Adulteress' Entrance into John's Gospel Chris Keith

Part II: John as Oral Performance

John's Memory Theater: A Study of Composition in Performance Tom Thatcher
The Medium and Message of John: Audience Address and Audience Identity in the Fourth Gospel Thomas E. Boomershine
Jesus Retold as the World's Light in Johannine Oral Prophecy Antoinette Wire

Part III: John in the Medium of Memory

Scripture Talks because Jesus Talks: The Narrative Rhetoric of Persuading and Creativity in John's Use of Scripture Michael Labahn
John's Gospel and the Oral Gospel Tradition James D.G. Dunn
Memory, Commemoration and History in John 2:19-22: A Critique and Application of Social Memory Anthony Le Donne
Abraham as a Figure of Memory in John 8:31-59 Catrin H. Williams

Part IV: Reflections and Directions

What Difference Does the Medium Make? Barry Schwartz
Introducing Media Culture to Johannine Studies Gail R. O'Day

Bibliography

Recenzii

'The contributors to this volume boldly and, in varying measure, successfully demonstrate not just the potential but even the necessity of attending to the media culture(s) in which the Johannine writings first found expression and reception. The issues raised by this volume may focus on the FG and related texts, but they apply more broadly to early Christian and Second-Temple Jewish texts in general. The focus on the Johannine literature gives this collection a coherence and concreteness that clarifies and demonstrates the possibilities of media research. However, the value of this collection for NT and biblical scholarship is in no way limited to students of the FG and its cousins.'-Biblical Theology Bulletin
...the volume as a whole represents a significant contribution to conversations surrounding the Fourth Gospel in relation to the first-century media culture.