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John as Divine Romance: Reading the Fourth Gospel with the Ancient Novel: Biblical Interpretation Series, cartea 236

Autor Eric Foster-Whiddon
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 14 mai 2026
Why does the Gospel of John tell its story of Jesus the way that it does? Informed by semiotic theory, Eric Foster-Whiddon reads the Fourth Gospel in comparison with the Greek novel Callirhoe, observing how recognition, beauty, travel, and love function in both narratives as intertextual frames that pressure the reader to infer meaning. Analysis of these intertextual frames informs a hypothetical recovery of the cultural encyclopedia from which authors and (more importantly for this study) readers in first-century western Asia Minor would draw when composing or interpreting a story like the Gospel of John or Callirhoe.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9789004740532
ISBN-10: 9004740538
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Biblical Interpretation Series


Notă biografică

Eric Foster-Whiddon (Ph.D., St Andrews) is Assistant Professor of Biblical Studies and Director of Graduate Studies in Ministry at Tabor College. He researches the New Testament and early Christian writings in their ancient philosophical and literary contexts.

Cuprins

Acknowledgements Ix
List Figures and Tables
AbbreviationsI

1 Introduction
1 The Fourth Gospel in Comparison … to What?
2 Four Intertextual Frames
3 Comparison and Interpretive Implications
4 The Novel in Antiquity
5 Authorship, Provenance, and Dating of Callirhoe
6 Authorship, Provenance, and Dating of GJohn
7 Audience and Reception of the Ideal Novels
8 Audience and Reception of GJohn
9 Conclusion

2 Recognition
1 Recognition: an Introduction
2 Recognition in Callirhoe
3 Recognition in GJohn
4 Conclusion

3 Beauty
1 Defining Beauty
2 Beauty in Callirhoe
3 Δόξα in GJohn
4 Priority of δόξα and Absence of κάλλος in GJohn
5 Conclusion

4 Travel
1 The Function of Travel in the Ideal Novels
2 Travel in Callirhoe
3 Travel in GJohn
4 Return and Restoration of Status
5 Conclusion

5 Love
1 Love in Callirhoe
2 Love in GJohn
3 Scheintod in the Ancient Novel and GJohn
4 John 11 as Micro-Narrative
5 Conclusion

6 Conclusion
1 Literary Implications
2 Hermeneutical Implications
3 Theological Implications
4 Socio-Historical Implications
5 Conclusion
Bibliography
Index of Modern Authors
Index of Ancient Sources
Index of Ancient Subjects