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The Prologue of the Fourth Gospel: A Sequential Reading: The Library of New Testament Studies

Autor Reverend Dr Peter Phillips
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 15 feb 2006
Phillips undertakes a sequential reading of the Prologue of John's Gospel. By using the reading strategies of Iser, Emmott, and Eco, the book establishes a reading strategy termed sequential disclosure, which is then applied to the text.In order to arrive at the reading, preliminary chapters focus both on historical interpretation of the Prologue in terms of reader response and on the role of the author, the use of persuasion and the development of irony. Special focus is given to the role of the dramatic prologue, as well as the interaction between rhetoric, irony and community. As such, the book discusses the role of the reading process in developing a specific community language. The book focuses on the didactic role of the Prologue in teaching readers this language and so including them into the Johannine community. The reading of the Prologue highlights the key aspects of the reading process: ambiguity and disambiguation; resemanticization; antilanguage; community development and intertextuality. A sequential reading of the Prologue highlights the didactic and evangelistic role of this text.JSNTS 294
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780567030658
ISBN-10: 0567030652
Pagini: 288
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.54 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția T&T Clark
Seria The Library of New Testament Studies

Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom

Cuprins

Chapter One: Introduction 1.1Introductory Comments 1.2Thresholds, Temples and Pompeii 1.3The Beginning as Threshold 1.4The Reader at the Threshold 1.5The Author at the Threshold 1.6Genette, Paratextuality and the Prologue 1.7Malbon's Three Functions of Gospel Beginnings 1.7.1The Interactional Function 1.7.2The Intertextual Function 1.7.3The Intratextual Function 1.8Thresholds and Welcome Chapter Two: John's Prologue and Literary Theory 2.1Introductory Comments 2.1.1John's Prologue and Literary Theory 2.1.2John's Prologue and 'Rhetoric' 2.1.3John's Prologue and Sociolinguistics 2.1.4One Methodology: Three Languages - Sequential Disclosure 2.2John's Prologue and Literary Theory 2.2.1Anatomy of the Fourth Gospel 2.2.2The Print's First Kiss 2.2.3Excursus on Paragrammatic Reading 2.2.4Back to The Print's First Kiss 2.3The Role of the Reader and the Act of Reading 2.3.1Wolfgang Iser's Phenomenological Approach to Reading 2.3.2Sequential Disclosure and Sequential Reading 2.3.3Sequential Disclosure in Catherine Emmott's Narrative Comprehension 2.3.4Sequential Disclosure in Eco's Theory of 'Interpretative Co-operation' 2.4From Theory to Practice? 2.4.1Stephen Moore on Sustained Interpretations 2.4.2Sternberg on David and Bathsheba 2.5The Role of Ambiguity in Sequential Disclosure 2.6Who, then, is the Reader? 2.7Sequential Reading and Educating Readers 2.8Conclusion Chapter Three: John's Prologue and Rhetoric 3.1John's Prologue and Rhetoric 3.2Rhetoric as the Art of Persuasion 3.3Rhetoric and Point of View 3.4Rhetoric as Author-Centred, Audience-Orientated 3.5Rhetoric and the Prologue 3.6The Prologue and the Prooimion 3.6.1Aristotle and the Prooimion 3.6.2The Dramatic Prologue 3.6.3The Didactic Role of Dramatic Prologues 3.6.4The Prooimion and the Prologue 3.6.5Prooimion or Prologue: Neither or Both? 3.7Repetitio 3.7.1Repetitio and the Prologue 3.7.2The Effect of Repetitio in the Prologue - a Spiral Structure? 3.7.3The Role of Repetition and Spiral Structure for the Reader 3.8The Prologue and Irony 3.8.1Irony in Ancient Rhetoric 3.8.2Irony in Greek Drama 3.8.3Irony as Invitation 3.9Conclusion Chapter Four: John's Prologue and Sociolinguistics 4.1Introduction 4.2Meeks and Johannine Sectarianism 4.3Beyond Meeks 4.4Petersen and Antilanguage 4.4.1The Johannine Community, Antisociety and Antilanguage 4.4.2The Functions and Setting of Antilanguage 4.4.3Halliday and Antilanguage 4.4.4Schniedewind and Qumranic Hebrew as an Antilanguage 4.4.5Johannine Language as an Antilanguage? 4.4.6A Johannine Antilanguage 4.4.7Antilanguage to Semantic Shift 4.5Semantics 4.5.1Wierzbicka and Conceptual Synonymy 4.5.2Specific Meanings developed for Specific Contexts 4.5.3Semantic Shift and the Gospel of John 4.5.4Semantic Shift and Sequential Disclosure 4.6Speech Accommodation Theory (SAT) 4.6.1Malina and SAT 4.6.2SAT as Intergroup or Intragroup Dynamic? 4.6.3SAT - another look 4.6.4Valentinian Exegesis as Outgroup Divergence 4.6.5The Prologue as Outgroup Convergence 4.7Conclusion Chapter Five: The Logos 5.1Introduction 5.2Intertextuality Again 5.3A Way Forward? 5.4General Greek Usage - the Lexica 5.5Christian Intertexts 5.5.1In the Gospels in General 5.5.2In the Johannine Literature 5.5.3Elsewhere in the New Testament 5.5.4Some Preliminary Conclusions 5.5.6Non-Canonical Christian Literature - The Odes 5.6Hellenistic Intertexts 5.6.1Heraclitus 5.6.1.1Heraclitus and Logos 5.6.1.2Heraclitus or a Stoic Heraclitus 5.6.1.3Heraclitus and a Logos Doctrine? 5.6.1.4Ambiguity in Heraclitean and Johannine Literature 5.6.2The Stoics 5.6.2.1The Stoics and Logos 5.6.2.2The Stoic Logos and the Prologue 5.6.3Gnostic/Hermetic Material 5.6.3.1Intertextual Possibilities in The Corpus Hermeticum 5.6.3.2The Corpus Hermeticum 5.6.3.3The Poimandres 5.6.3.4Hermeticism and the Prologue 5.6.3.5Introductory Comments to the Gnostic Texts 5.6.3.6The Tripartite Tractate 5.6.3.7The Gospel of Truth 5.6.3.8The Trimorphic Protennoia 5.6.3.9Gnostic and Hermetic Texts and the Prologue 5.7A Hellenistic-Jewish Intertext - Philo of Alexandria 5.7.1Introductory Comments 5.7.2Philo and logos 5.7.3Dodd, Plato and Philo 5.7.4Philo and the Prologue 5.8Other Jewish Intertexts 5.8.1The Word of God in the Hebrew Bible 5.8.1.1The Word of God 5.8.1.2Metaphor or Being? 5.8.1.3Lo/goj in the Septuagint and the Prologue 5.8.2The Sapiential Tradition 5.8.2.1Wisdom 5.8.2.2Available or Remote Wisdom? 5.8.2.3Scott's Sophia and the Johannine Jesus 5.8.2.4The Prologue as Re-interpretation 5.8.2.5Wisdom: A Conclusion? 5.8.3Torah Speculation 5.8.3.1Wisdom, Word and Torah 5.8.3.2The Prologue and Torah 5.9Conclusion 5.9.1Parallels without a doubt? 5.9.2Parallels or Echoes? 5.9.3The Prologue and Learning How to Read 5.9.4The Logos as Jesus 5.9.5Exit the Logos - Enter Jesus Chapter Six: A Reading of the Prologue 6.1Introduction 6.2Verse 1a 6.3Verse 1b,c 6.4Verse 2 6.5Verse 3a,b 6.6Verse 3c, 4 6.7Verse 5 6.8Verse 6 6.9Verse 7 6.10Verse 8 6.11Verse 9 6.12Verse 10 6.13Verse 11 6.14Verse 12 6.15Verse 13 6.16Verse 14a 6.17Verse 14b 6.18Verse 14c 6.19Verse 15 6.20Verse 16 6.21Verse 17 6.22Verse 18 Chapter Seven: Conclusion Bibliography Appendix A: Logos: Some Quotations from Classical Texts

Recenzii

"This demanding study is persuasive. Phillips's sophisticated analysis demonstrates that this Gospel has an evangelistic agenda."   Kent Brower JSNTS Booklist, 2007
Review by George L. Parsenios, Princeton Theological Seminary in Religious Studies Review
'... a clearly planned and well-written piece of work building on clues gleaned from reader-response criticism and sociolinguistic scholarship. [...] Phillip's thesis that the Prologue is the threshold through which the reader enters the text of the Gospel is both interesting and illuminating. [...] I commend [this book] to readers interested in John and the role of the Prologue.' - John Painter, Charles Sturt University, Canberra, Australian Capital Territory, Australia