Eusebius and the Jewish authors : his citation technique in an apologetic context /
"Eusebius and the Jewish Authors" examines Eusebius of Caesarea's use of non-biblical Jewish texts (e.g. "Philo", "Josephus", "Aristobulus") in his "Praeparatio evangelica" and "Demonstratio evangelica". In the first part, Sabrina Inow...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés Francés |
Publicado: |
Leiden ; Boston :
Brill,
2006.
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Colección: | Arbeiten zur Geschichte des antiken Judentums und des Urchristentums ;
Bd. 64. |
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Contents
- PREFACE
- ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
- ABBREVIATIONS
- INTRODUCTION
- CHAPTER ONE: SOURCES AND METHOD
- 1. Eusebius of Caesarea and the APODEIXIS
- 2. The Jewish Authors Quoted by Eusebius
- 3. STATUS QUAESTIONIS
- 4. Presentation of the Material
- CHAPTER TWO: THE CITATION PROCESS IN GREEK ANTIQUITY AND IN THE APODEIXIS
- 1. The Citation Process in Antiquity
- A. The Cutting of Citations
- B. "Discriminating" Citations
- C. The Use of Citations
- D. Referring to Cited Works
- E. Faithfulness to the Text Cited
- F. Conclusion
- 2. The Citation Process in the APODEIXIS
- To Which Tradition Does Eusebius' Citation Technique in the Apodeixis Belong?
- 3. Eusebius' Citation Technique in the APODEIXIS
- A. The Citations in the Apodeixis: A Rhetorical Technique in Its Own Right
- B. The Weight of Auctoritas in the Apodeixis: Horizontal and Vertical Relations
- C. Citing Authors, Authors Cited: A Subtle Play of Authority in the Apodeixis
- D. Strategies of Concealment and Identification of the Sources in the Apodeixis
- E. Quantitative Assessment of the Citations in the Apodeixis
- F. The Commentary on the Citations in the Apodeixis
- G. Levels of Agreement between Eusebius' Discourse and the Citations in the Apodeixis: Polyphony, Symphony, and Cacophony
- H. Strategies of Distinction of the Citations in the Apodeixis
- I. Promises of Faithfulness in the Apodeixis
- J. References to the Text Cited in the Apodeixis
- 4. Conclusions
- CHAPTER THREE: THE CITATIONS OF NON-JEWISH AUTHORS IN THE APODEIXIS
- 1. The AUCTORITAS of the Cited Authors in the APODEIXIS
- A. Pagan Authors
- B. Christian Authors
- C. Biblical Authors
- 2. Eusebius' Faithfulness to the Cited Text in the APODEIXIS
- A. Citations of Pagan Authors
- B. Citations of Christian Authors
- C. Citations of the Bible
- 3. Eusebius' Use of Citations in the APODEIXIS
- A. Citations of Pagan Authors
- B. Citations of Christian Authors
- C. Biblical Citations
- 4. Conclusion
- CHAPTER FOUR: THE "HEBREWS" AND THE "JEWS" ACCORDING TO EUSEBIUS: THE JEWISH AUTHORS' STATUS IN THE APODEIXIS
- 1. The "Hebrews" according to Eusebius
- A. Ancient Hebrews
- B. Post-Mosaic Jews as "Hebrews"
- 2. The "Jews" according to Eusebius
- A. "Jews" before Christ
- B. "Jews" after Christ
- 3. Conclusions
- CHAPTER FIVE: THE "TRAVAIL DE LA CITATION" IN THE APODEIXIS: THE CASE OF THE JEWISH AUTHORS' CITATIONS
- 1. Discovery and Selection of the Jewish Authors' Citations
- A. Clement of Alexandria
- B. Origen
- C. Two Possibilities: Porphyry and Anatolius
- 2. Ablation of the Jewish Authors' Citations
- 3. Eusebius' Use of Second-Hand Sources
- A. Citations of Jewish Authors Derived from Collections: Some Hypotheses
- B. Pagan Authors Cited through Jewish Authors
- 4. Strategies of Discrimination of the Jewish Authors' Citations
- A. Carefully Cut Jewish Authors' Citations
- B. Jewish Authors' Citations Which Were Cut Incoherently
- C. Cutting Citations as a Means of Semantic Distortion
- 5. The Arrangement of the Jewish Authors' Citations
- A. Association of Jewish Citations
- B. Citations of Jewish Authors Associated with Citations of Christian Authors
- C. Citation of a Jewish Author Associated witha Pagan Author and a Christian Author
- 6. References to the Citations from the Jewish Authors
- A. In Which Form Did Eusebius Read the Jewish Authors' Works?
- B. Exact references to the Jewish authors' texts
- C. Vague or erroneous references to the Jewish authors' citations
- D. Examples of cross-references
- 7. Faithfulness to the text of the Jewish authors' citations
- A. Status quaestionis
- B. Examples of textual changes in the Historia ecclesiastica
- C. Textual changes in the Praeparatio
- D. Textual changes in the Demonstratio
- 8. Conclusions
- CHAPTER 6: EUSEBIUS' USE OF THE JEWISH AUTHORS' CITATIONS IN THE APODEIXIS
- 1. Function of the Jewish Authors' Citations in the Apodeixis
- A. Jewish authors' citation as intermediary between Jewish-Christian and Greek thought: the case of Philo's and Aristobulus' texts
- B. Jewish authors' citations as a source of apologetic and polemical themes: the cases of Philo, Josephus, Aristobulus, Pseudo-Aristeas, and the "minor" Jewish authors
- C. Jewish authors' citations as a source for Christian history
- 2. Exploitation of the Jewish authors' citations in the Apodeixis
- A. Jewish authors' citations as "Hebrew" testimonies
- B. Jewish authors' citations as "Jewish" testimonies
- C. Jewish authors' citations as Greek testimonies ; Jewish authors' citations as sources of non-Jewish authors' citations ; "Minor" Jewish authors' citations as "Greek" testimonies
- D. Jewish authors' citations as testimonies on Christianity
- 3. Levels of Agreement Between Eusebius' Discourse and the Jewish Authors' Citations in the Apodeixis: Polyphony, distancing, and "degré zéro"
- 4. Conclusions.