Reconceptualising Conversion: Patronage, Loyalty, and Conversion in the Religions of the Ancient MediterraneanDie Studie nimmt die bisherige Diskussion der Konversion in der Antike neu auf durch eine Verknüpfung von klassischen, epigraphischen und biblischen Quellen mit einer sozialwissenschaftlichen Methodologie. Der Autor hinterfragt dabei die bisher vorausgesetzte psychologische Kontinuität zwischen antiken und modernen Menschen und bietet statt dessen ein Modell, welches an den Denkvoraussetzungen der Antike selbst gebildet wurde. Die griechisch-römischen und mediterranen Religionen und Philosophien - also auch das hellenistische Judentum und das Christentum - orientierten sich an den Modellen von Patronat und Loyalität. Das Verständnis der antiken Konversion muss also hier ansetzen. In diesem Zusammenhang wird auch die "Bekehrung" des Paulus neu gedeutet. |
From inside the book
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Patronage, Loyalty, and Conversion in the Religions of the Ancient Mediterranean Zeba A. Crook. 2.2 Defining our Terms : Patronage vs. Benefaction 2.2.1 Stephan Joubert ... Rhetoric of Patronage and Benefaction in X Table of Contents.
... patronage and clientage in the ancient world , which I undertake in Chapter Two . First , it is widely acknowledged ... rhetoric of patronage , as opposed to the structure of patronage , that is the focus of the third chapter ...
Patronage, Loyalty, and Conversion in the Religions of the Ancient Mediterranean Zeba A. Crook. patron / benefactor is human or divine . The first of these rhetorical conventions is the call of the patron . Here we find the claim ...
... rhetoric of patronage and benefaction I have come to call patronal synkrisis . Synkrisis is the simplest of rhetorical tropes- it means comparison . Typically it was used in encomiastic writing to compare the subject of a bios to a ...
... patron ( in exchange for benefactions received or the promise of benefactions ) , the rhetoric of patronage and benefaction refers to the patterns of articulation most commonly invoked by the client in order to increase the honour of the ...
Contents
1 | |
13 | |
15 | |
22 | |
31 | |
49 | |
53 | |
54 | |
36 Conclusion | 148 |
The Rhetoric of Patronage and Benefaction in Pauls Conversion Passages | 151 |
1 1617 15810 | 155 |
1117 | 170 |
4b11 | 179 |
44 Paul and the Patronage of Philosophy | 186 |
45 Conclusion | 192 |
Patronage and Benefaction Loyalty and Conversion | 199 |
Patronage vs Benefaction | 59 |
23 Human Patronage and Benefaction | 67 |
24 Divine Patronage and Benefaction | 76 |
25 Divine Patronage and Benefaction in Hellenistic Judaism | 79 |
26 Conclusion | 88 |
The Rhetoric of Patronage and Benefaction | 91 |
31 The Call of the PatronBenefactor | 93 |
32 Persuasion and Philosophical Conversion | 100 |
33 Prayer Praise and Proselytism | 108 |
34 Patronal Synkrisis | 117 |
35 The Χάρις of the PatronBenefactor | 132 |
51 The Nature of Loyalty | 201 |
52 Loyalty and Patronage and Benefaction | 215 |
53 Loyalty Conversion and Paul | 243 |
54 Conclusion | 250 |
Conclusion | 251 |
Bibliography | 257 |
Index of Primary Sources | 287 |
Index of Names and Subjects | 303 |
Index of Modern Authors | 307 |