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ANCIENT JEW REVIEW

January 30, 2024

Anti-Judaism, Meddlesomeness, and Epistemic Supersessionism in the Epistle to Diognetus

by Chance E. Bonar in Essays, Articles, Publications


Scenes from the life of Jesus depicted on a fragment of an early Christian sarcophagus (4th century CE) Narbo Via Museum [Wikimedia]. 

Scenes from the life of Jesus depicted on a fragment of an early Christian sarcophagus (4th century CE) Narbo Via Museum [Wikimedia]. 

In this article, I want to contextualize the term polupragmosunē as it is used in the works of other writers in the Roman imperial period (particularly Plutarch, Apuleius, Lucian, and Tertullian) and demonstrate how polupragmosunē is a key component of Diognetus’s anti-Jewish rhetoric and construction of uniquely Christian knowledge.

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TAGS: essays


October 11, 2021

Dissertation Spotlight | Representing the Destruction of Jerusalem: Literary Artistry and the Shaping of Memory in 2 Kings 25, Lamentations, and Ezekiel

by Cathleen Chopra-McGowan in Essays


Capture of Jerusalem by Nebuchadnezzar, miniature by Jean Fouquet, courtesy of Wikimedia

Capture of Jerusalem by Nebuchadnezzar, miniature by Jean Fouquet, courtesy of Wikimedia

Capture of Jerusalem by Nebuchadnezzar, miniature by Jean Fouquet, courtesy of Wikimedia

Capture of Jerusalem by Nebuchadnezzar, miniature by Jean Fouquet, courtesy of Wikimedia

“I contend, however, that the impetus to reconstruct a historical account of ‘what really happened’ has significantly undertheorized the differing ways in which biblical texts both recount and shape the very idea of destruction of Jerusalem.”

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TAGS: dissertation


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