Emory Studies in Early Christianity
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Volumes in Emory Studies in Early
Christianity investigate early Christian literature in the context
of Mediterranean literature, religion, society, and culture. The authors
use interdisciplinary methods informed by social, rhetorical, literary,
and anthropological approaches to move beyond limits within traditional
literary-historical investigations. The studies presuppose that Christianity
began as a Jewish movement in various geographical, political, economic,
and social locations in the Greco-Roman World. 2. H. Wayne Merritt, In Word and Deed: Moral Integrity in Paul, 1993. 3. Vernon K. Robbins, New Boundaries in Old Territory: Form and Social Rhetoric in Mark, 1994. Edited and introduced by David B. Gowler. 4. Jan Botha, Subject to Whose Authority? Multiple Readings of Romans 13, 1994. 5. Kjell Arne Morland, The Rhetoric of Galatians: Paul Confronts Another Gospel, 1995. 6. Peder Borgen, Vernon K. Robbins, and David B. Gowler (eds.), Recruitment, Conquest and Conflict: Strategies in Judaism, Early Christianity, and the Greco-Roman World, 1998. 7. Mark D. Given, Paul's True Rhetoric: Ambiguity, Cunning and Deception in Greece and Rome, 2001. 8. Anders Eriksson, Thomas H. Olbricht, and Walter Übelacker (eds.), Rhetorical Argumentation in Biblical Texts: Essays from the Lund 2000 Conference, 2002. 9. James D. Hester and J. David Hester (Amador) (eds.), Rhetorics and Hermeneutics: Wilhelm Wuellner and His Influence at the Close of the Century, 2004. 10. Todd C. Penner, In Praise of Origins: Stephen and the Hellenists in Lukan Apologetic Historiography, 2004. 11. Anders Eriksson and Thomas H. Olbricht (eds.), Rhetoric, Ethic, and Moral Persuasion in Biblical Discourse, 2005. 12. Lynn R. Huber, Like a Bride Adorned: Reading Metaphor in John's Apocalypse, 2007. |
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