Kniha Delivering from Memory Wiliam D. Shiell

Delivering from Memory

The Effect of Performance on the Early Christian Audience

Jazyk: Angličtina
Vazba: Brožovaná
Dostupnost: Skladem u dodavatele
Odesíláme za 9-15 dnů
539
Synopsis: When the New Testament was read publicly, what effect did the p...

Informace o knize

Jazyk
Angličtina
Vazba
Kniha - Brožovaná
Vydáno
2011
Stránek
154
EAN
9781608996780
ISBN
9781608996780
Enbook ID
08791794
Hmotnost
216
Rozměry
152 x 229 x 8

Kompletní popis

Synopsis: When the New Testament was read publicly, what effect did the performances have on the audience? In Delivering from Memory, William Shiell argues that these performances shaped early Christian paideia among communities of active, engaged listeners. Using Greco-Roman rhetorical conventions, Shiell's groundbreaking study suggests that lectors delivered from memory without memorizing the text verbatim and audiences listened with their memories in a collaborative process with the performer. The text functioned as a starting place for emotion, paraphrase, correction, and instruction. In the process, the performances trained and shaped the character of the reader and the formation of the audience. The lector's performance functioned as a mirror for the audience to examine themselves as children of God. These conventions shaped the ways lectors performed Jesus. Just as the New Testament reflects many titles for Jesus, so the canonical form of the Gospels offers many ways Jesus was performed in the ancient world. By interpreting through the eyes of performance, we join a conversation that has existed since the formative stages of the Christian movement. By performing with the ancient audience, we shape the character of reader and audience through the emotions, rhetorical figures, and memories in the text. We raise new questions about audiences in the ancient world and interpret stories through the ears of performance. Endorsements: "Drawing on ancient rhetorical criticism and the emerging field of performance criticism, Shiell uses the Greco-Roman rhetorical convention of memory to explicate the relationship between performer and audience in the hermeneutical process of performing and hearing sacred texts. This book simply sparkles with gems from the rhetorical handbooks that illuminate the ways in which performance of Christian texts instructed, informed, and formed (what Shiell calls paideia) the identity of early Christian audiences as followers of Christ . . . This is a must-read book for scholars and preachers alike!" -Mikeal C. Parsons Professor and Macon Chair in Religion Baylor University "Based on a wealth of information from ancient sources, William Shiell paints a fascinating picture of the early church as a predominantly oral culture--performers, audiences, and rhetorical impact. He argues persuasively that oral teaching from memory shaped the social identity and practices of early Christian communities. This book will transform your image of the early church and stimulate fresh possibilities for the church today. I commend this study to preachers, teachers, students, and scholars as a solid introduction to the oral ethos of early Christianity." -David Rhoads Emeritus Professor of New Testament Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago Author Biography: William D. Shiell is the Senior Pastor of First Baptist Church of Knoxville, Tennessee. He is the author of Reading Acts: The Lector and the Early Christian Audience (2004) and Sessions with Matthew (2008).

Mohlo by vás zajímat

Jake's Safari

Robin Hanbury-Tenison
402
909

The One You Don't See Coming

Kathy Carman Henderson
230
230
631

Gears of War

Karen Traviss
299
694
129

Castro's Cuba: Quo Vadis?

Strategic Studies Institute
445
375

Dark Intruder

Emma Nwanne Ibegbulem
573
360

Becoming a Man

Phillip E Payne
589

Bibs

Corbin
739

Faithful and the Damned

Edmund a Wise Jr
493

Food Chaining

Mark Fishbein
354

Zákaznicí kteří koupili tuto knihu koupili také

381

Panorama hispanohablante 2 Coursebook

Maria Isabel Isern Vivancos
988

ABBA za železnou oponou

Miroslav Graclík
418

I Love to Share

Shelley Admont
581

Honigmonathe

Caroline Auguste Fischer
299
2 642