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Self, Self-Fashioning and Individuality in Late Antiquity

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This collection of articles places the frequently discussed question of the introvert Self into a new interdisciplinary context: rather than tracing a linear development from social forms of life w...
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  • 14 January 2020
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This collection of articles places the frequently discussed question of the introvert Self into a new interdisciplinary context: rather than tracing a linear development from social forms of life with an outward orientation to individual introspection, it argues for significant overlaps between interior and exterior dimensions, between the Self and society. A team of internationally renowned experts from different fields examines pagan, Jewish and Christian voices on an equal basis and explores the complexity of their messages. Philosophical texts are analyzed next to letters, legal sources, Bible interpretation and material evidence. Not only is the experience of individuals examined, but also instructions from authoritative figures in a position to shape constructions of the Self. The book is divided into three parts; namely, "Constructing the Self", a field usually treated by philosophers, "Self-Fashioning", generally associated with literature, and "Self and Individual in Society", commonly the domain of historians. This volume shows the complexity of each category and their overlaps by engaging unexpected sources in each section and interrogating internal as well as external dimensions.
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Price: £193.90
Pages: 567
Publisher: Mohr Siebeck
Imprint: Mohr Siebeck
Series: Culture, Religion, and Politics in the Greco-Roman World
Publication Date: 14 January 2020
ISBN: 9783161589904
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

HISTORY / Ancient / General, Literary studies: ancient, classical and medieval, Systems of law: Roman law, Ancient history, Religion: general, Philosophy of religion, Judaism, Ancient Greek religion and mythology, Roman religion and mythology, Theology

REVIEWS Icon
Maren R. Niehoff: Fashioning this Volume

Constructing the Self
David Lambert: "Desire" Enacted in the Wilderness: Problems in the History of the Self and Bible Translation
Matthew Roller: Selfhood, Exemplarity, and Cicero's Four Personae: On Constructing Your Self after Your Model and Your Model after Your Self
Margaret Graver: Interiority and Freedom in Seneca's De Beneficiis: Acts of Kindness and the Perfected Will
Gretchen Reydams-Schils: How to "Become Like God" and Remain Oneself
Karen King: Becoming Fully Human: Contours and Expressions of the Self according to The Gospel of Mary
Yair Furstenberg: Rabbinic Responses to Greco-Roman Ethics of Self-Formation in Tractate Avot
Charles Stang: The Doubled Self and the Worship of the Gods
Joshua Levinson: The Divided Subject: Representing Modes of Consciousness in Rabbinic Midrash
Laura Nasrallah: The Worshipping Self, the Self in Light
Edward Watts: The Senses, the Self, and the Christian Roman Imperial Subject: Hagia Sophia as a Space of Directed Interiority

Self-Fashioning
Catharine Edwards: The Epistolographic Self: The Role of the Individual in Seneca's Letters
Eve-Marie Becker: Paul's Epistolary Self in and around Philippians
Ilaria Ramelli: Autobiographical Self-Fashioning in Origen
Maren R. Niehoff: A Hybrid Self: Rabbi Abbahu in Legal Debates in Caesarea
Irmgard Mannlein-Robert: Move Your Self: Mobility and Migration of Greek Intellectuals to Rome
Reuven Kiperwasser: Narrating the Self: Stories about Rabbi Zeira's Encounters in the Land of Israel

Self and Individual in Society
Clifford Ando: Self, Society, Individual, and Person in Roman Law
Jorg Rupke: Urban Selves: Individualisation in the Cities of the Roman Empire
Sarit Kattan Gribetz: Constructions of the Self through Time: Gender, Text, Embodiment, Experience
Mira Balberg: The Subject Supposed to Forget: Rabbinic Formations of the Legal Self
Ishay Rosen-Zvi: Two Midrashic Selves: Between Origen and the Mekhilta
Alfons Furst: Individuality and Self-Agency: The Self in Origen's Metaphysics of Freedom
Tobias Nicklas: Constructing Individual Selves within Social Hierarchies: The Letters of Copres and Synesios