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J.H.D. Scourfield (ed.), Texts and Culture in Late Antiquity: Inheritance, Authority, and Change

J.H.D. Scourfield (ed.), Texts and Culture in Late Antiquity: Inheritance, Authority, and Change

Publié le par Bérenger Boulay


J.H.D. Scourfield (ed.), Texts and Culture in Late Antiquity: Inheritance, Authority, and Change.
Swansea: The Classical Press of Wales, 2007, xii-346p.

Isbn (ean13): 978-1-905125-17-3.

Recension par Bret Mulligan et William Wren Lebowitz (Haverford College) dans Bryn Mawr Classical Review 2008.08.17

Présentation de l'éditeur,

Late Antiquity has increasingly been viewed as aperiod of transformation and dynamic change, a process as evident inits literature as in the spheres of society and politics. In thisvolume, thirteen scholars focus on the intellectual and literaryculture of the time, investigating complex relationships betweenlate-Antique authors and the texts which they had inherited through theclassical (pagan) and Christian traditions. Particular emphasis isplaced on works that carried special authority: Homer, Virgil, Plato,and the Bible. The volume thus contributes to the history of thereception of classical texts, and through its inclusiveness(classical/classicising, philosophical, and patristic writing are allrepresented) seeks to offer a view of the textual world of lateAntiquity as a unified whole; by the same token, it affords a scholarlyintroduction to a sweep of late-Antique literature in Greek and Latin.Authors and genres discussed include Juvencus and Claudian, Plotinusand Proclus, Jerome and John Cassian, geographical and grammaticalwriting, and Christian cento.

J.H.D. (David) Scourfield is Professor of Classics at the National University of Ireland, Maynooth. He is the author of Consoling Heliodorus: A Commentary on Jerome, Letter 60 (Oxford, 1993), and of articles on late-Antique literature and the ancient novel.

Sommaire:

Textual Inheritances and Textual Relations in Late Antiquity (J.H.D. Scourfield); A New Created World: Classical Geographical Texts and Christian Contexts in Late Antiquity (Mark Humphries); Antiquity and Authority in Nonius Marcellus (Anna Chahoud );More Roman than the Romans of Rome: Virgilian (Self-)Fashioning inClaudian's Panegyric for the Consuls Olybrius and Probinus (Stephen Wheeler ); Birth and Transfiguration: Some Gospel Episodes in Juvencus and Sedulius (Roger P.H. Green ); Virgil, Christianity, and the Cento Probae (Scott McGill); The Bible Hellenized: Nonnus' Paraphrase of St John's Gospel and ‘Eudocia's' Homeric Centos (Mary Whitby); Plotinus and the Myth of Love (Andrew Smith); John of Stobi on the Soul (John Dillon); What's in a Divine Name? Proclus on Plato's Cratylus (R.M. van den Berg ); Pagans and Christians on Providence (Andrew Louth ); Jerome, Virgil, and the Captive Maiden: The Attitude of Jerome to Classical Literature (Ann Mohr); John Cassian, the Instituta Aegyptiorum, and the Apostolic Church (Richard J. Goodrich).