Sheds light on a relatively dark period of literary history, the late third century CE, by examining how some early Christian writers tried to re-orient literature. Methodius of Olympus' dialogic Symposium exposes an era's new concerns, with its insistence that the future is more interesting than the past.
Sheds light on a relatively dark period of literary history, the late third century CE, by examining how some early Christian writers tried to re-orient literature. Methodius of Olympus' dialogic Symposium exposes an era's new concerns, with its insistence that the future is more interesting than the past.
Dawn LaValle Norman is a Research Fellow at the Australian Catholic University's Institute for Religion and Critical Inquiry.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction. Christians among Imperial Greek writers in the third century 1. Mapping third-century literature from the Severans to Constantine 2. The end of dialogue? The Christianization of a tradition 3. Compilation and unity in Imperial sympotic traditions 4. Rhetoric and the problem of rivalry 5. The lyric tradition and changing hymnic forms Conclusion.
Introduction. Christians among Imperial Greek writers in the third century 1. Mapping third-century literature from the Severans to Constantine 2. The end of dialogue? The Christianization of a tradition 3. Compilation and unity in Imperial sympotic traditions 4. Rhetoric and the problem of rivalry 5. The lyric tradition and changing hymnic forms Conclusion.
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