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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Nina E. LiveseyPublisher: Polebridge Press Imprint: Polebridge Press Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.381kg ISBN: 9781598151749ISBN 10: 1598151746 Pages: 278 Publication Date: 30 September 2016 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsA fine and expert analysis of Paul's rhetoric in Galatians ... An example of the very best scholarship to bridge the two disciplines, Classics and Religious Studies. -Christine Shea, Professor of Classics, Ball State University The interpretation of the apostle Paul has long puzzled scholars and continue to do so. Did Paul leave Judaism for Christianity or did he, as more recent scholarship suggests, remain a Torah observant Jew all his life? By applying a 'rhetoric-of-crisis' approach to Galatians, Nina E. Livesey convincingly shows that Paul uses similar rhetorical strategies as other ancient authors involved in polemical discourses, which has far-reaching consequences for how to understand Paul's use of dichotomies and exaggerations as well as his relation to Judaism. This ground-breaking study of Paul's polemics cannot be overlooked by any serious student of the apostle, and is likely to have a considerable effect on all future discussions of Pauline hermeneutics. -Magnus Zetterholm, Associate Professor of New Testament Studies, Lund University Nina Livesey offers up a most illuminating study of Paul's letter to the Galatians. Grounded in ancient rhetorical practice and performance, particularly a close comparative reading of Demosthenes and Cicero, Livesey deploys the category rhetoric of crisis to illustrate the rhetorical dynamics and textures that permeate Paul's argument in this bafflingly contentious missive. Livesey compellingly argues that we must rethink how-and how seriously!-we read, understand, and take Paul's rhetoric. The starkly polarizing language and the binaries nurtured and sustained throughout the letter have proved to be a bedrock for articulations of early Christian identity, theology, and social history, contributing as well to substantively anti-Jewish assessments of Pauline theology. Livesey moves us beyond what has proved to be an impasse in Pauline studies. She carefully outlines the case that the rhetorical nature of the letter makes it difficult to draw a one-to-one correspondence with reality, historical or conceptual, behind the text. Livesey forces us to rethink much of what we think we know about Galatians and Paul, with broader implications for a thoroughgoing reassessment of our well-established narratives of early Christian theology and social development. This book has the potential to be a game changer. Not least, as a result of this study we will all need to evidence a great deal more humility and tenuousness in our readings of Galatians and our constructions of Pauline social and theological history. This reintroduction of ambiguity and complexity is to be celebrated, of course, and we are in Livesey's debt. And to be sure, this study comes at a most opportune time: the rhetoric of crisis abounds in our midst, and understanding how it works in the ancient world helps us better assess and respond to how it is operating in our own. -Todd Penner, author of De-Introducing the New Testament: Texts, Worlds, Methods, Stories Author InformationNina E. Livesey (Ph.D., Southern Methodist University) is Associate Professor of Religious Studies and Liberal Studies at the University of Oklahoma in Norman, USA. A specialist in Jewish-Christian relations and Christian origins with an emphasis on Pauline studies, she is the author of Circumcision as a Malleable Symbol (2010) and multiple scholarly articles both on Paul and on second-century Christianity. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |