Children in the Bible and the Ancient World is a helpful introduction to any who study children and childhood in the ancient world.
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Autorenporträt
Shawn W. Flynn received a PhD in 2012 from the University of Toronto, Canada, in Ancient Near Eastern Studies. His first book was YHWH is King, published in Vetus Testamentum Supplements (2014); he also authored Children in Ancient Israel: The Hebrew Bible and Mesopotamia in Comparative Perspective (2018). In addition, A Story of YHWH: Cultural Translation and Subversive Reception in Israelite History is forthcoming(Routledge, 2019). He is currently an Associate Professor of the Hebrew Bible at St Joseph's College, University of Alberta, Canada, and the Academic Dean of the College.
Inhaltsangabe
List of contributors; Foreword; Part I: Children in the Hebrew Bible and the Ancient Near East; Chapter 1, Vows and Children in the Hebrew Bible, Heath D. Dewrell;Chapter 2, Turning Birth into Theology: Traces of Ancient Obstetric Knowledge within Narratives of Difficult Childbirth in the Hebrew Bible, Claudia D. Bergmann;Chapter 3, Uncooperative Breeders: Parental Investment and Infant Abandonment in Hebrew and Greek Narrative, David A. Bosworth;Chapter 4, Failure to Marry: Girling Gone Wrong, Kristine Henriksen Garroway;Part II: Children in Christian Writings and the Greco-Roman World; Chapter 5, Girls and Goddesses: The Gospel of Markand the Eleusinian Mysteries, Sharon Betsworth;Chapter 6, Children and Church: The Ritual Entry of Children into Pauline Churches, John W. Martens;Chapter 7, "Stay away from my children!": Educators and the Accusation of Sexual Abuse in Roman Antiquity, Christian Laes;Section 3: Children and Material Culture; Chapter 8, I Bless You by YHWH of Samaria and His Barbie: A Case for Understanding Judean Pillar Figurines as Children's Toys, Julie Faith Parker;Chapter 9, Coming of Age at St Stephen's: Bioarchaeology of Children at a Byzantine Jerusalem Monastery (5th-7th Centuries CE), Sue Sheridan;Afterword; Chapter 10, Protoevangelium of James, Menstruating Mary, and Twenty-First-Century Adolescence: Purity, Liminality, and the Sexual Female, Doris M. Kieser
List of contributors; Foreword; Part I: Children in the Hebrew Bible and the Ancient Near East; Chapter 1, Vows and Children in the Hebrew Bible, Heath D. Dewrell;Chapter 2, Turning Birth into Theology: Traces of Ancient Obstetric Knowledge within Narratives of Difficult Childbirth in the Hebrew Bible, Claudia D. Bergmann;Chapter 3, Uncooperative Breeders: Parental Investment and Infant Abandonment in Hebrew and Greek Narrative, David A. Bosworth;Chapter 4, Failure to Marry: Girling Gone Wrong, Kristine Henriksen Garroway;Part II: Children in Christian Writings and the Greco-Roman World; Chapter 5, Girls and Goddesses: The Gospel of Markand the Eleusinian Mysteries, Sharon Betsworth;Chapter 6, Children and Church: The Ritual Entry of Children into Pauline Churches, John W. Martens;Chapter 7, "Stay away from my children!": Educators and the Accusation of Sexual Abuse in Roman Antiquity, Christian Laes;Section 3: Children and Material Culture; Chapter 8, I Bless You by YHWH of Samaria and His Barbie: A Case for Understanding Judean Pillar Figurines as Children's Toys, Julie Faith Parker;Chapter 9, Coming of Age at St Stephen's: Bioarchaeology of Children at a Byzantine Jerusalem Monastery (5th-7th Centuries CE), Sue Sheridan;Afterword; Chapter 10, Protoevangelium of James, Menstruating Mary, and Twenty-First-Century Adolescence: Purity, Liminality, and the Sexual Female, Doris M. Kieser
Rezensionen
"The volume shows that the study of ancient children has progressed over the last decades, which makes collective volumes like this possible. While further conceptual and methodological studies on ancient children in different periods and regions are still needed, the volume shows that, by applying already existing theories and approaches to their material, such as "childist" approaches referenced by several contributors, novel readings of often-discussed passages can be achieved. While the editor notes that "historical contexts are essential to understanding children" (p. x), most contributions demonstrate that in turn, by taking the presence of children in narratives as a point of departure, the historical context of the passages discussed can sometimes also be better understood. The contributions are thus relevant to Biblicists, Classicists and scholars of the Ancient Near East, as well as those interested in gender, education, and childhood studies in general." - Bryn Mawr, Classical Review
"The book certainly succeeds in its goal to illustrate the variety of historical approaches to the study of children in biblical and extrabiblical literature (...) Children in the Bible and the Ancient World is an excellent anthology for introducing scholars to the various historical approaches to childhood studies in the field of biblical literature."
- David A. Schones, Austin College, Reading Religion