Bible and Interpretation: The Collected Essays of James Barr

Bible and Interpretation: The Collected Essays of James Barr
Author: James Barr
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 604
Release: 2013-03-28
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 0199692882

The first of three volumes of James Barr's collected essays. Begins with a biographical essay and contains major articles on theology in relation to the Bible, programmatic studies of the past and future of biblical study, and reflections on specific topics in the study of the Old Testament.

Matrices of Genre

Matrices of Genre
Author: Mary Depew
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Total Pages: 360
Release: 2009-07-01
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9780674034204

The literary genres given shape by the writers of classical antiquity are central to our own thinking about the various forms literature takes. Examining those genres, the essays collected here focus on the concept and role of the author and the emergence of authorship out of performance in Greece and Rome. In a fruitful variety of ways the contributors to this volume address the questions: what generic rules were recognized and observed by the Greeks and Romans over the centuries; what competing schemes were there for classifying genres and accounting for literary change; and what role did authors play in maintaining and developing generic contexts? Their essays look at tragedy, epigram, hymns, rhapsodic poetry, history, comedy, bucolic poetry, prophecy, Augustan poetry, commentaries, didactic poetry, and works that "mix genres." The contributors bring to this analysis a wide range of expertise; they are, in addition to the editors, Glenn W. Most, Joseph Day, Ian Rutherford, Deborah Boedeker, Eric Csapo, Marco Fantuzzi, Stephanie West, Alessandro Barchiesi, Ineke Sluiter, Don Fowler, and Stephen Hinds. The essays are drawn from a colloquium at Harvard's Center for Hellenic Studies.

Gods and Mortals in Early Greek and Near Eastern Mythology

Gods and Mortals in Early Greek and Near Eastern Mythology
Author: Adrian Kelly
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 355
Release: 2021-05-06
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1108570240

This volume centres on one of the most important questions in the study of antiquity – the interaction between Greece and the Ancient Near East, from the Mycenaean to the Hellenistic periods. Focusing on the stories that the peoples of the eastern Mediterranean told about the gods and their relationships with humankind, the individual treatments draw together specialists from both fields, creating for the first time a truly interdisciplinary synthesis. Old cases are re-examined, new examples discussed, and the whole range of scholarly opinions, past and present, are analysed, critiqued, and contextualised. While direct textual comparisons still have something to show us, the methodologies advanced here turn their attention to deeper structures and wider dynamics of interaction and influence that respect the cultural autonomy and integrity of all the ancient participants.

Numerical Sayings in the Old Testament

Numerical Sayings in the Old Testament
Author: Roth
Publisher: BRILL
Total Pages: 113
Release: 2014-09-03
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9004275363

Preliminary material /W. M. w. Roth -- Introduction /W. M. W. Roth -- Chapter One: The Structure of the Numerical Saying /W. M. w. Roth -- Chapter Two: Narrative Numerical Sayings /W. M. w. Roth -- Chapter Three: Reflective Numerical Sayings /W. M. w. Roth -- Chapter Four: Hortative Numerical Sayings /W. M. w. Roth -- Conclusion /W. M. w. Roth -- Index of Passages /W. M. w. Roth.

The Names of Homeric Heroes

The Names of Homeric Heroes
Author: Nikoletta Kanavou
Publisher: Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG
Total Pages: 199
Release: 2015-09-14
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 3110422026

The purpose of this book is to contribute to the appreciation of the linguistic, literary and contextual value of Homeric personal names. This is an old topic, which famously interested Plato, and an object of constant scholarly attention from the time of ancient commentators to the present day. The book begins with an introduction to the particularly complex set of factors that affect all efforts to interpret Homeric names. The main chapters are structured around the character and action of selected heroes in their Homeric contexts (in the case of the Iliad, a heroic war; the Odyssey chapter encompasses more than one planes of action). They offer a survey of modern etymologies, set against ancient views on names and naming, in order to reconstruct (as far as possible) the reception of significant names by ancient audiences and further to shed light on the parameters surrounding the choice and use of personal names in Homer. An Appendix touches on the underexplored career of Homeric personal names as historical names, offering data and a preliminary analysis.

The East Face of Helicon : West Asiatic Elements in Greek Poetry and Myth

The East Face of Helicon : West Asiatic Elements in Greek Poetry and Myth
Author: M. L. West
Publisher: Clarendon Press
Total Pages: 694
Release: 1997-10-23
Genre: Comparative literature
ISBN: 0191591041

Over the last sixty years scholars have increasingly become aware of links connecting early Greek poetry with the literatures of the ancient Near East. Martin West's new book far surpasses previous studies in comprehensiveness, demonstrating these links with massive and detailed documentation and showing they are much more fundamental and pervasive than has hitherto been acknowledged. - ;Ever since Neolithic times Greek lands lay open to cultural imports from western Asia: agriculture, metal-working, writing, religious institutions, artistic fashions, musical instruments, and much more. Over the last sixty years scholars have increasingly become aware of links connecting early Greek poetry with the literatures of Mesopotamia, Anatolia, Canaan, and Israel. Martin West's new book far surpasses previous studies in comprehensiveness, demonstrating these links with massive and detailed documentation and showing that they are much more fundamental and pervasive than has hitherto been acknowledged. His survey embraces Hesiod, the Homeric epics, the lyric poets, and Aeschylus, and concludes with an illuminating discussion of possible avenues of transmission between the orient and Greece. He believes that an age has dawned in which Hellenists will no more be able to ignore Near Eastern literature than Latinists can ignore Greek. -

Pederasty and Pedagogy in Archaic Greece

Pederasty and Pedagogy in Archaic Greece
Author: William A. Percy
Publisher: University of Illinois Press
Total Pages: 276
Release: 1996
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9780252067402

Combining impeccable scholarship with accessible, straightforward prose, Pederasty and Pedagogy in Archaic Greece argues that institutionalized pederasty began after 650 B.C., far later than previous authors have thought, and was initiated as a means of stemming overpopulation in the upper class. William Armstrong Percy III maintains that Cretan sages established a system under which a young warrior in his early twenties took a teenager of his own aristocratic background as a beloved until the age of thirty, when service to the state required the older partner to marry. The practice spread with significant variants to other Greek-speaking areas. In some places it emphasized development of the athletic, warrior individual, while in others both intellectual and civic achievement were its goals. In Athens it became a vehicle of cultural transmission, so that the best of each older cohort selected, loved, and trained the best of the younger. Pederasty was from the beginning both physical and emotional, the highest and most intense type of male bonding. These pederastic bonds, Percy believes, were responsible for the rise of Hellas and the "Greek miracle": in two centuries the population of Attica, a mere 45,000 adult males in six generations, produced an astounding number of great men who laid the enduring foundations of Western thought and civilization.

Light from the Gentiles: Hellenistic Philosophy and Early Christianity

Light from the Gentiles: Hellenistic Philosophy and Early Christianity
Author: Abraham J. Malherbe
Publisher: BRILL
Total Pages: 1153
Release: 2013-10-10
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9004256520

Rather than viewing the Graeco-Roman world as the “background” against which early Christian texts should be read, Abraham J. Malherbe saw the ancient Mediterranean world as a rich ecology of diverse intellectual traditions that interacted within specific social contexts. These essays, spanning over fifty years, illustrate Malherbe’s appreciation of the complexities of this ecology and what is required to explore philological and conceptual connections between early Christian writers, especially Paul and Athenagoras, and their literary counterparts who participated in the religious and philosophical discourse of the wider culture. Malherbe’s essays laid the groundwork for his magisterial commentary on the Thessalonian correspondence and launched the contemporary study of Hellenistic moral philosophy and early Christianity.

Plato’s Gorgias

Plato’s Gorgias
Author: Mário Jorge de Carvalho
Publisher: Imprensa da Universidade de Coimbra / Coimbra University Press
Total Pages: 276
Release: 2020-07-17
Genre: Literary Collections
ISBN: 9892620143

Though at first it may seem to deal with rather specific questions concerning rhetoric, Plato’s Gorgias turns out to be about human life, and what is at stake in it. This apparent “change of subject” – or rather this ambiguity in the dialogue’s subjectmatter – has to do with the fact that the Gorgias is very much like a labyrinth: puzzling, intricate, made of multiple meandering paths in which one can easily get lost, and full of deviations which turn this way and that, of entrances that seem to be dead ends, and of dizzying turns that distort all sense of direction.