توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب T&T Clark Handbook to Early Christian Meals in the Greco-Roman World
نام کتاب : T&T Clark Handbook to Early Christian Meals in the Greco-Roman World
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : کتابچه راهنمای T&T Clark به وعده های غذایی اولیه مسیحی در دنیای یونانی-رومی
سری : T&T Clark Handbooks
نویسندگان : Soham Al-Suadi, Peter-Ben Smit (editors)
ناشر : T&T CLARK
سال نشر : 2019
تعداد صفحات : 413
ISBN (شابک) : 9780567666406 , 9780567666413
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 29 مگابایت
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فهرست مطالب :
Title Page\nCopyright Page\nContents\nIntroduction to T&T Clark Handbook to Early Christian Meals in the Greco-Roman World\nPart One: Authors & Collections\n Chapter 1: Meals in the Works of Philo of Alexandria\n Introduction\n 1 Meals in De Vita Contemplativa\n Concluding remarks\n Notes\n Bibliography\n Chapter 2: Dining with Dignity: Josephus’s Rhetorical Use of the Essene Common Meals\n Introduction\n 1 Josephus’s description of the Essene common meals\n 2 Josephus’s purpose with the Essene common meals\n 3 Concluding remarks\n Notes\n Bibliography\n Chapter 3: Plutarch’s Septem sapientium convivium: An Example of Greco-Roman Sympotic Literature\n Introduction: Genre and content – An overview\n 1 The order of the depicted banquet and symposion\n 2 Insights into Plutarch’s thoughts about the ideal banquet and, respectively, symposion\n 3 Social status and symbolic communication within the context of the meal\n 4 Concluding remarks\n Notes\n Bibliography\n Chapter 4: Meals at Qumran: Literary Fiction, Liturgical Anticipation, or Performed Ritual?\n Introduction: Studying meals in texts from Qumran: Two temptations\n 1 Communal meals as a literary motif in Qumran texts\n 2 The idea of the meal in the World to Come at Qumran?\n 3 Conclusion\n Notes\n Bibliography\n Chapter 5: Hermetic Texts in Nag Hammadi Codex VI\n Introduction\n 1 NHC VI.6 and VI.7 within the composition of the codex\n 2 Evidence for a ‘cultic meal’ in the background of the hermetic texts of NHC VI?\n 3 Conclusion\n Notes\n Bibliography\n Chapter 6: Meals in the Apostolic Fathers\n Introduction\n 1 Survey\n Bibliography\n Chapter 7: ‘Prepare Yourself.’ Spatial Rhetoric in Rabbinic and Synoptic Meal Parables\n Introduction\n 1 Rabbinic meal etiquette\n 2 Spatial dimension: Material context and rhetoric\n 3 Meal parables and spatial rhetoric\n 4 Conclusion\n Notes\n Bibliography\nPart Two: Gospel Tradition\n Chapter 8: The Gospel of Mark – The Commitment of the ‘Unleavened’ to the Kingdom of God Agenda of Jesus\n Introduction\n 1 The Meal of the Feast of the ‘Unleavened (bread)’ and the ‘Leaven’\n 2 The interpretative statement after drinking out of the cup (Mk 14.23-34)\n 3 The historical date of Jesus’s last meal\n 4 Conclusion\n Notes\n Bibliography\n Chapter 9: Meals in the Gospel of Luke\n Introduction and overview\n 1 Meal, symposium and table talk\n 2 Meals and social formation\n 3 The meal as utopia: The eschatological meal\n 4 Lack of a literary concept\n 5 The cup that is poured out (Lk. 22.20)\n Notes\n Bibliography\n Chapter 10: The Primary Role of Meals in Matthew’s Construction of Diasporic Identity\n Introduction: The basic synergy of Matthew and meals\n 1 The plethora of Matthean texts intersecting with ancient meal codes\n 2 Major Matthean themes intersecting with meal motifs\n 3 Matthew’s construction of diasporic identity\n 4 Summarizing twentieth- and twenty-first-century diaspora theory\n 5 The expanded Matthean diaspora\n 6 Conclusion: Meals’ feast of diasporic belonging in Matthew\n Notes\n Bibliography\n Chapter 11: ‘Let Anyone Who is Thirsty Come to Me, and Let the One Who Believes in Me Drink’: The Johannine Jesus as the True Provider of Earthly and Heavenly Nourishment\n Introduction and overview: Meal scenes and metaphorical talk about food and drink in the Fourth Gospel\n 1 The role of hosts and guests in the Fourth Gospel\n 2 Conclusion: The provider of food par excellence evokes belief in his audience\n Notes\n Bibliography\n Chapter 12: Interpretations of the Eucharist in the Gospel of Philip\n 1 Eating and the Eucharist in the Nag Hammadi codices and related documents\n 2 The Eucharist in the Gospel of Philip\n 3 Conclusion\n Notes\n Bibliography\nPart Three: Acts\n Chapter 13: Meals as a Literary Motif in Acts of the Apostles\n Introduction\n 1 Acts 2.42-47 as a paradigmatic text\n 2 ‘Breaking bread in their homes’: The communal meal and the house\n 3 The house, the meal and community formation\n 4 Gender and meals in acts\n 5 Conclusion\n Notes\n Bibliography (with selected annotations)\n Chapter 14: The Contribution of Meal Scenes to the Narrative Theology of Acts of Paul\n Meal scenes in Acts of Paul: Introduction and overview\n 1 Meals in Acts of Paul and Thecla: Ascetic communal meals as opposed to pagan banquets\n 2 Miracle and meals for the needy in Myra\n 3 Refusal to take part in cultic meals as a source of conflict with mainstream religion and society in Sidon\n 4 A meal as part of a Christian nocturnal initiation in Ephesus\n 5 Paul’s last supper in Corinth: A bread miracle and ‘feasting according to the custom of the fasting’\n 6 Conclusion: multiple meanings of communal meals in Acts of Paul\n Notes\n Bibliography\n Chapter 15: Eucharists and other Meals in the Apocryphal Acts of John and Acts of Andrew\n Introduction\n 1 The Acts of John\n 2 Acts of Andrew\n 3 Conclusion\n Notes\n Bibliography\n Chapter 16: Meals in Joseph and Aseneth\n Introduction\n 1 Narrated meals in Joseph and Aseneth\n 2 The so-called meal formulas in Joseph and Aseneth\n 3 How to eat with non-Jews?\n 4 The discourse on meal practices in the Greek and Roman novel\n 5 Conclusion\n Notes\n Bibliography\nPart Four: Epistolary Literature\n Chapter 17: “The Meal in 1 Corinthians 11”\n Introduction\n 1 The overall structure of the Hellenistic meal\n 2 The Hellenistic meal in the letters of Paul\n 3 1 Corinthians 11\n 4 Jesus as symposiarch\n 5 The utopian symposiarch\n 6 Jesus as the symposiarch\n 7 The realization of the utopia\n 8 Conclusion\n Notes\n Bibliography\n Chapter 18: Meals in the Letter to the Romans – The Debate about the Food on the Table\n Introduction\n 1 Rom. 14.1–15.13\n 2 Conclusion\n Notes\n Bibliography\n Chapter 19: Pseudepigraphic Letters of Paul\n Introduction\n 1 Pseudepigraphic authority\n 2 The Hellenistic meal in pseudepigraphic Pauline letters\n 3 Meal theology in pseudepigraphic Pauline letters\n 4 Meal theology in Pauline tradition\n 5 Conclusion\n Bibliography\n Chapter 20: Meals in the Johannine Letters\n Introduction\n 1 ‘Sacramental’ allusions in 1 Jn 5.6-8?\n 2 Conclusion\n Notes\n Bibliography\n Chapter 21: Meals in the Further Epistolary Literature of the New Testament\n Introduction\n 1 The Letter of James\n 2 The First Letter of Peter\n 3 The Letter of Jude\n 4 The Pauline origin of agapê as a term for a meal gathering\n 5 The Second Letter of Peter\n Notes\n Bibliography\n Chapter 22: Useless Foods: Communal Meals in Hebrews\n Introduction\n 1 The Epistle to the Hebrews and communal meals\n 2 Context, structure and content\n 3 Research history and central intertext\n 4 How the intertext Exod. 32–34 interprets Heb. 13\n 5 Conclusion\n Notes\n Bibliography\nPart Five: Apocalyptic Literature\n Chapter 23: Food in Fourth Ezra\n Introduction\n 1 Food, food symbolism and meals in the social world of 4 Ezra and in 4 Ezra\n 2 Foodstuffs, eating and drinking in 4 Ezra\n 3 Conclusion: Foodstuffs, eating and drinking in 4 Ezra\n Notes\n Bibliography\n Chapter 24: Meals and Banqueting Culture in the Apocalypse of John\n Introduction\n 1 References of real and metaphorical meals and aspects of meals\n 2 Warnings for false foodstuffs\n 3 The meal of the future\n 4 Abundance instead of hunger\n 5 Conclusion: Meals as identity markers\n Bibliography\nPart Six: Texts of Daily Life\n Chapter 25: Meals and Magic: Eating for Revelation in the Eighth Book of Moses (PGM XIII/ Leiden I 395)1\n Introduction: What is a magical text?\n 1 The Greek magic papyri (PGM)\n 2 Case study: The Eight Book of Moses (PGM XIII)\n 3 Structural analysis of the key ritual for revelation\n 4 Conclusion\n Notes\n Bibliography\n Chapter 26: Meals in Ancient Medicinal Texts\n Introduction\n 1 Texts\n Notes\n Bibliography\n Chapter 27: Material Meals: Space, Inscription and Image as the Texts of Daily Life\n Introduction\n 1 Mediterranean meals\n 2 Jewish/Ascetic\n 3 Emergent Christian\n 4 Monastic\n 5 Conclusion\n Notes\n Bibliography\nName Index\nAncient Sources