The Christianization of Knowledge in Late Antiquity - Letteney, Mark; - Prospero Internet Bookshop

The Christianization of Knowledge in Late Antiquity: Intellectual and Material Transformations
 
Product details:

ISBN13:9781009363389
ISBN10:1009363387
Binding:Hardback
No. of pages:350 pages
Size:235x159x24 mm
Weight:610 g
Language:English
705
Category:

The Christianization of Knowledge in Late Antiquity

Intellectual and Material Transformations
 
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Date of Publication:
 
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Short description:

Traces ancient scholars and the manuscripts they produced, demonstrating that imperial Christianity changed not just what people believe, but how people think.

Long description:
The Christianization of Knowledge in Late Antiquity: Intellectual and Material Transformations&&&160;traces the beginning of Late Antiquity from a new angle. Shifting the focus away from the Christianization of people or the transformation of institutions, Mark Letteney interrogates the creation of novel and durable structures of knowledge across the Roman scholarly landscape, and the embedding of those changes in manuscript witnesses. Letteney explores scholarly productions ranging from juristic writings and legal compendia to theological tractates, military handbooks, historical accounts, miscellanies, grammatical treatises, and the&&&160;Palestinian Talmud. He demonstrates how imperial Christianity inflected the production of truth far beyond the domain of theology - and how intellectual tools forged in the fires of doctrinal controversy shed their theological baggage and came to undergird the great intellectual productions of the Theodosian Age, and their material expressions. Letteney's volume offers new insights and a new approach to answering the perennial question: What does it mean for Rome to become Christian? This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.

'In The Christianization of Knowledge in Late Antiquity, Mark Letteney offers a profoundly new and powerful analysis of late ancient intellectual life. He argues that a new model for social authority gave rise to a new form of argument, whose prestige status shaped developments across disparate fields of inquiry, from theology to law and far, far beyond. It's a book with a thesis, and it deserves to be read and debated by anyone interested in late antiquity.' Clifford Ando, University of Chicago
Table of Contents:
1. Christianizing knowledge, or beginning of Late Antiquity; Part I. New readers: 2. A history of Christian fact finding; 3. A methodological revolution in fourth-century theology; 4. A new order of books in the Theodosian age; Part II. New texts: 5. New bookforms; 6. New texts; 7. Christian tools in traditionalist texts; 8. New meanings.