توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب The Land of the Body: Studies in Philo's Representation of Egypt
نام کتاب : The Land of the Body: Studies in Philo's Representation of Egypt
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : سرزمین بدن: مطالعاتی در نمایش فیلو مصر
سری : Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament; 208
نویسندگان : Sarah J.K. Pearce
ناشر : JCB Mohr (Paul Siebeck)
سال نشر : 2007
تعداد صفحات : 393
[394]
ISBN (شابک) : 9783161492501 , 9783161514975
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 4 Mb
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فهرست مطالب :
Cover
Dedication
Acknowledgements
Table of Contents
Abbreviations
Editions and Translations
Introduction
I. Previous Scholarship
II. Approach of this Study
Chapter 1: Philo’s Contexts
I. Historical Context
Introduction
Philo’s Personal Context
Philo’s Jewish Context
Philo’s Alexandria
Philo’s Jerusalem
II. Intellectual Contexts
Introduction
Philo’s Writings
Philo’s Readers
Philo as Interpreter of Scripture
Philo and the Greek Pentateuch
Philo as Allegorist
Migration and Allegory
Literal Interpretation
Philo’s Jewish Tradition
Hebrew Etymologies
Jewish Literature of the Hellenistic Period
Promoting and Defending Judaism
Chapter 2: Egyptians in Philo’s World
I. Introduction
II. Defining the Egyptian
Status Definitions
Cultural Distinctions
Roman Definitions
Snobbish Contempt for Egyptians
Egyptians in Roman Literature
III. Egyptians in Philo’s In Flaccum and Legatio ad Gaium
Introduction
In Flaccum
Egyptians of the χώρα
Egyptians and Corporal Punishment: the Alexandrian Custom
The Egyptian (τό Aỉγυπτιαхόν)
Egyptian Disorder
Egyptian Envy
Legatio ad Gaium
Introduction
Attacks on the Prayer-Houses of Alexandria
Recycled (Im)piety: the Alexandrians’ Impious Innovation
The Alexandrians’ Deception of Gaius
Egyptian Atheism: the Language of Deceit
Egyptians in Rome
Summary
Chapter 3: Egypt, Land of the Body
I. Introduction
II. The Wider Context
The Etymological Interpretation of ‘Egypt’
Philo on the Body
Egypt as Symbol
Apposition and Substitution
Earlier Traditions
Egypt on the Pentateuch’s Map of Migration
Other Maps of Migration: the Iliad and the Odyssey
Other Symbols of the Body
Philo on Migration from the Body
Summary
III. Egypt and Migration away from the Body
Abraham
The Promised Land: ‘from the river of Egypt to the great river Euphrates’ (Gen. 15.18)
Philo on Gen. 15.18
Egypt as Bodily Passions and the Mortal
Egypt as the Bodily and External Goods
The River of Egypt as the Body and its Evils
Isaac
No Entry into Egypt (Gen. 26.2–3)
Jacob
Introduction
Jacob knows the Dangers of Life in the Land of the Body
Jacob’s Descent into Egypt
Egypt as Hades
Jacob’s Fear: Egypt and the Deification of the Created
Joseph
Joseph in De Migratione Abrahami
Joseph’s Bones
Joseph as a Figure of Freedom from the Land of the Body
Joseph in Prison
Joseph’s Knowledge of God
Joseph dismisses the Egyptian Court
Joseph’s Brothers in Egypt
Joseph as Ruler of the Bodily Land
Exodus
The title 'Eξαγωγή
Oppression in Egypt as Subjection to the Flesh and the Passions
Israel’s Groaning in Egypt
The ‘Abominations of Egypt’
Passover
Passover as ‘Crossing (διάβασις)'
The Mother of every Disorder
Beyond the Exodus
IV. Summary
Chapter 4: Egyptians as Symbols
I. Introduction: Egyptian Characteristics
The Egyptian Failure to ‘see God’
II. The Pharaohs
Abram and Pharaoh
Joseph and Pharaoh
Another King (Exod. 1.8–2.23)
The Pharaoh of the Exodus (Exod. 3.10–15.21)
Philo’s Pharaohs
Introduction
Pharaoh ‘the Scatterer’
Exod. 32.25 and the Origins of Pharaoh ‘the Scatterer’
Pharaoh as Typhonic Figure?
Pharaoh, the Enemy of God
The Self-Lover (φíλαυτος)'
‘The Over-Proud Mind
The Atheist
Moses as ‘god to Pharaoh’ (Exod. 6.28–7.2)
III. The Egyptian Overseer
Introduction
Philo on the Killing of the Egyptian
IV. Egyptian Sophists
Introduction
Philo and the Egyptian Sophists
V. Hagar the Egyptian
Introduction
Philo’s Hagar: Symbol of the Encyclia
The Value of the Encyclia
Hagar the Egyptian and the Bodily Value of the Encyclia
Hagar in the Exposition
VI. Summary
Chapter 5: Wicked Hosts and Perfect Guests
Introduction
Philo’s Intended Readers
Hospitality: the Greek Tradition
Inhospitable Egyptians
Jews as Inhospitable?
Hospitality in Jewish Tradition
Abraham in Egypt
Joseph in Egypt
Moses in Egypt
Philo on the Law of Moses and the Duty of Hospitality
De Virtutibus
Summary
Chapter 6: Egyptian Atheism: Philo on the Nile
Introduction
The Veneration of the Nile in Philo’s Egypt
Philo on Egyptian Veneration of the Nile
The Nile in De Vita Mosis
Atheism
De Fuga 180: the ‘Egyptian Trope’ as Atheist
The Half-Egyptian Blasphemer
De Posteritate Caini 1–4
Legatio ad Gaium 163: Alexandrians and ‘the Egyptian Atheism’
The Blasphemer and Egyptian Atheism
Summary
Chapter 7: Animal Worship in Philo’s World
I. Introduction
Animal Worship in Egypt
II. The Outsider View: Greek and Roman Views of Egyptian Animal Veneration
Herodotus
Diodorus of Sicily
Strabo of Amasia
Satire and the Poetry of Contempt
Philosophers
Plutarch of Chaeronea
III. Jewish Tradition
The Pentateuch and the Prophets
Judaism and Egyptian Religion: the Negative Tradition
Jewish Tradition after Philo
Josephus and Manetho
Josephus and Apion
Judaism and Egyptian Religion: Positive Traditions?
Chapter 8: Philo on Egyptian Animal Worship
I. Introduction
Philo’s View of Animals
II. Philo on Egyptian Animal Worship
De Vita Contemplativa (On the Contemplative Life)
De Decalogo (On the Decalogue)
The Worship of the Golden Calf
The Allegorical Commentary
The Soul Honours the Body as Gold: Sacr. 130
The Soul’s Assault on the Body: Fuga 90
Θεοπλαστέω: the ‘Deification’ of Created Things
The Deification of the Body: Ebr. 95–96
The Destruction of the Pleasures of the Body: Post. 158–169
De Vita Mosis
De Specialibus Legibus I.79
Other Jewish Traditions
A Contemporary Angle?
Summary
Bibliography
Principal Editions of Philo’s Works
Modern Scholarly Literature
Index
Passages
Modern Authors
Subjects