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Patmos In The Reception History Of The Apocalypse Ian Boxall

  • SKU: BELL-4211708
Patmos In The Reception History Of The Apocalypse Ian Boxall
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Patmos In The Reception History Of The Apocalypse Ian Boxall instant download after payment.

Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
File Extension: PDF
File size: 3.34 MB
Pages: 272
Author: Ian Boxall
ISBN: 9780199674206, 0199674205
Language: English
Year: 2013

Product desciption

Patmos In The Reception History Of The Apocalypse Ian Boxall by Ian Boxall 9780199674206, 0199674205 instant download after payment.

This monograph explores the significance accorded to John's island of Patmos (Rev. 1:9) within the wider reception history of the Apocalypse. In contrast to the relatively scant attention paid to John's island in modern commentaries, this reception-historical survey reveals both the greater prominence accorded to Patmos by earlier interpreters, and the richer diversity of readings the text has provoked. These include interest in the physical character of Patmos and its significance as an island; the date and reason for John's sojourn there; attempts to locate Patmos in a geography which is sometimes more mythical than literal; the meaning of the name "Patmos" in the context of a biblical book which treats other place-names symbolically. This diversity is supported by a close reading of Rev. 1:9, which highlights the extent to which even its literal sense is highly ambiguous.
Ian Boxall brings together for the first time in a coherent narrative a wide range of interpretations of Patmos, reflecting different chronological periods, cultural contexts, and Christian traditions. Boxall understands biblical interpretation broadly, to include interpretations in biographical traditions about John, sermons, liturgy, and visual art as well as biblical commentaries.He also considers popular and marginal readings alongside magisterial and centrist ones, and draws analogies between similar hermeneutical strategies across the centuries. In the final chapter Boxall explores the wider implications of his study for biblical scholarship, advocating an approach which encourages use of the imagination and reader participation, and which works with a broader concept of 'meaning' than traditional historical criticism.

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