Poetry and Exegesis in Premodern Latin Christianity

Poetry and Exegesis in Premodern Latin Christianity
Author: Willemien Otten,Karla Pollmann
Publsiher: BRILL
Total Pages: 378
Release: 2007-09-01
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9789047421320

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This volume presents a broad variety of specifically Christian approaches to poetry and analyses modes of interpreting the Bible that are new in poetry compared with prose exegesis. Both theoretical statements on poetry by Christians and concrete poetic works from roughly 300 to 1250 AD are taken into account.

Poetry and Exegesis in Premodern Latin Christianity

Poetry and Exegesis in Premodern Latin Christianity
Author: Willemien Otten,Karla Pollmann
Publsiher: BRILL
Total Pages: 379
Release: 2007
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9789004160699

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This volume presents a broad variety of specifically Christian approaches to poetry and analyses modes of interpreting the Bible that are new in poetry compared with prose exegesis. Both theoretical statements on poetry by Christians and concrete poetic works from roughly 300 to 1250 AD are taken into account.

Classicism and Christianity in Late Antique Latin Poetry

Classicism and Christianity in Late Antique Latin Poetry
Author: Philip Hardie
Publsiher: University of California Press
Total Pages: 304
Release: 2019-08-27
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9780520295773

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After centuries of near silence, Latin poetry underwent a renaissance in the late fourth and fifth centuries CE evidenced in the works of key figures such as Ausonius, Claudian, Prudentius, and Paulinus of Nola. This period of resurgence marked a milestone in the reception of the classics of late Republican and early imperial poetry. In Classicism and Christianity in Late Antique Latin Poetry, Philip Hardie explores the ways in which poets writing on non-Christian and Christian subjects used the classical traditions of Latin poetry to construct their relationship with Rome’s imperial past and present, and with the by now not-so-new belief system of the state religion, Christianity. The book pays particular attention to the themes of concord and discord, the "cosmic sense" of late antiquity, novelty and renouatio, paradox and miracle, and allegory. It is also a contribution to the ongoing discussion of whether there is an identifiably late antique poetics and a late antique practice of intertextuality. Not since Michael Robert's classic The Jeweled Style has a single book had so much to teach about the enduring power of Latin poetry in late antiquity.

The Genres of Late Antique Christian Poetry

The Genres of Late Antique Christian Poetry
Author: Fotini Hadjittofi,Anna Lefteratou
Publsiher: Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG
Total Pages: 402
Release: 2020-10-12
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9783110696233

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Classicizing Christian poetry has largely been neglected by literary scholars, but has recently been receiving growing attention, especially the poetry written in Latin. One of the objectives of this volume is to redress the balance by allowing more space to discussions of Greek Christian poetry. The contributions collected here ask how Christian poets engage with (and are conscious of) the double reliance of their poetry on two separate systems: on the one hand, the classical poetic models and, on the other, the various genres and sub-genres of Christian prose. Keeping in mind the different settings of the Greek-speaking East and the Latin-speaking West, the contributions seek to understand the impact of historical setting on genre, the influence of the paideia shared by authors and audiences, and the continued relevance of traditional categories of literary genre. While our immediate focus is genre, most of the contributions also engage with the ideological ramifications of the transposition of Christian themes into classicizing literature. This volume offers important and original case studies on the reception and appropriation of the classical past and its literary forms by Christian poetry.

Exegesis and Poetry in Medieval Karaite and Rabbanite Texts

Exegesis and Poetry in Medieval Karaite and Rabbanite Texts
Author: Joachim Yeshaya,Elisabeth Hollender
Publsiher: BRILL
Total Pages: 340
Release: 2016-09-27
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9789004334786

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This collection of essays offers an inquiry into the complex interaction between exegesis and poetry that characterized medieval and early modern Karaite and Rabbanite treatment of the Bible in the Islamic world, the Byzantine Empire, and Christian Europe.

The Oxford Handbook of Medieval Latin Literature

The Oxford Handbook of Medieval Latin Literature
Author: Ralph Hexter,David Townsend
Publsiher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 672
Release: 2012-01-20
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780199875191

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The twenty-eight essays in this Handbook represent the best of current thinking in the study of Latin language and literature in the Middle Ages. The insights offered by the collective of authors not only illuminate the field of medieval Latin literature but shed new light on broader questions of literary history, cultural interaction, world literature, and language in history and society. The contributors to this volume--a collection of both senior scholars and gifted young thinkers--vividly illustrate the field's complexities on a wide range of topics through carefully chosen examples and challenges to settled answers of the past. At the same time, they suggest future possibilities for the necessarily provisional and open-ended work essential to the pursuit of medieval Latin studies. While advanced specialists will find much here to engage and at times to provoke them, this handbook successfully orients non-specialists and students to this thriving field of study. The overall approach of The Oxford Handbook of Medieval Latin Literature makes this volume an essential resource for students of the ancient world interested in the prolonged after-life of the classical period's cultural complexes, for medieval historians, for scholars of other medieval literary traditions, and for all those interested in delving more deeply into the fascinating more-than-millennium that forms the bridge between the ancient Mediterranean world and what we consider modernity.

A Christian in Toga

A Christian in Toga
Author: Claudio Moreschini
Publsiher: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht
Total Pages: 157
Release: 2014-07-16
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9783647540276

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Claudio Moreschini focuses on selected and as yet still understudied aspects of Boethius' life and works. He presents Boethius in the culture of the sixth century in Italy, outlines his great cultural project and discusses the problem of his Christian faith. The Consolatio Philosophiae is examined from the point of view of Latin Platonism, highlighting the aims of its poetry and its philosophical tenets. Moreschini also shows how Boethius combined Christian faith and philosophy in order to solve theological issues, most notably the Christological debates of his times or the question of the Trinity.

The Poetics of Late Latin Literature

The Poetics of Late Latin Literature
Author: Jaś Elsner,Jesús Hernández Lobato
Publsiher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 545
Release: 2017
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9780199355631

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For a host of reasons, traditionalist scholarship has failed to give a full and positive account of the formal, aesthetic and religious transformations of ancient poetics in Late Antiquity. This collection of new essays attempts to capture the vibrancy of the living ancient tradition reinventing itself in a new context in the hands of a series of great Latin writers of the fourth and fifth centuries AD.