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Andrew Jacobs's profile was updated on Humanities Commons 9 years ago
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Andrew Jacobs's profile was updated on Humanities Commons 9 years ago
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Andrew Jacobs deposited “Solomon’s Salacious Song”: Foucault’s Author Function and the Early Christian Interpretation of the Canticum Canticorum on Humanities Commons 9 years ago
The transformation of the erotic Song of Songs into a mystical tract on the soul’s love for Christ was surely one of the great exegetical feats of late ancient Christianity. Recent work on the politics of meaning leads us to interrogate more closely the processes by which early Christian exegetes achieved that feat, and how their interpretations…[Read more]
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Andrew Jacobs deposited A Family Affair: Marriage, Class, and Ethics in the Apocryphal Acts of the Apostles on Humanities Commons 9 years ago
In this essay I juxtapose a dominant culture discourse of the family, one which aims to construct an ethical center out of the marital union, with a deconstructive effort on the part of certain early Christian groups, in order to suggest that this particular Christian “antifamilial” rhetoric associated its family ethics with issues of class and…[Read more]
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Andrew Jacobs deposited The Disorder of Books: Priscillian’s Canonical Defense of Apocrypha on Humanities Commons 9 years ago
The Disorder of Books: Priscillian’s Canonical Defense of Apocrypha
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Andrew Jacobs deposited Writing Demetrias: Ascetic Logic in Ancient Christianity on Humanities Commons 9 years ago
Writing Demetrias: Ascetic Logic in Ancient Christianity
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Andrew Jacobs deposited The Place of the Biblical Jew in the Early Christian Holy Land on Humanities Commons 9 years ago
The Place of the Biblical Jew in the Early Christian Holy Land
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Andrew Jacobs's profile was updated on Humanities Commons 9 years ago
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Andrew Jacobs's profile was updated on Humanities Commons 9 years ago
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Andrew Jacobs's profile was updated on Humanities Commons 9 years ago
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Andrew Jacobs's profile was updated on Humanities Commons 9 years ago
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Andrew Jacobs deposited ‘The Most Beautiful Jewesses in the Land’: Imperial Travel in the Early Christian Holy Land on Humanities Commons 9 years ago
This essay examines the ways in which Jews were encoded into the holy land travel literature of the Christian Roman Empire (fourth through sixth centuries) as a means of naturalising and authenticating new modes of Christian, imperial power. Postcolonial criticism is used to analyse pilgrimage texts of the holy land (the Bordeaux pilgrim, Egeria,…[Read more]
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Andrew Jacobs deposited The Remains of the Jew: Imperial Christian Identity in the Late Ancient Holy Land on Humanities Commons 9 years ago
The Remains of the Jew: Imperial Christian Identity in the Late Ancient Holy Land
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Andrew Jacobs deposited Fathers Know Best? Christian Families in the Age of Asceticism on Humanities Commons 9 years ago
Fathers Know Best? Christian Families in the Age of Asceticism
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Andrew Jacobs deposited “Let Him Guard Pietas”: Early Christian Exegesis and the Ascetic Family on Humanities Commons 9 years ago
Often those Church Fathers most concerned to press the new ascetic elitism of
the fourth and fifth centuries might also produce surprisingly “profamily”
interpretations of biblical texts that otherwise supported an ascetic agenda.
Through analysis of patristic interpretation of Luke 14.26 (an arguably “antifamily”
passage of the New Testame…[Read more] -
Decades before the publishing phenomenon The Da Vinci Code turned millions of readers on to the excitement and glamour of early Christian history and biblical studies, a steady stream of novels—some obscure, some bestsellers were teaching the popular reading public about the thrills and chills of the academic study of Scriptures. These ‘gospel thr…[Read more]
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Andrew Jacobs deposited A Jew’s Jew: Paul and the Early Christian Problem of Jewish Origins on Humanities Commons 9 years ago
A Jew’s Jew: Paul and the Early Christian Problem of Jewish Origins
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Andrew Jacobs deposited Dialogical Differences: (De-)Judaizing Jesus’ Circumcision on Humanities Commons 9 years ago
This essay seeks to rethink the inscription of difference in early Christianity by
focusing on the role of the circumcision of Jesus—a paradigmatically Jewish
mark on the Christian savior’s body—in early Christian “dialogue”-texts
(both external dialogues, such as Justin’s Dialogue with Trypho, as well as
erotapokriseis-texts, here framed as i…[Read more] -
Andrew Jacobs deposited Blood Will Out: Jesus’ Circumcision and Early Christian Readings of Exodus 4:24-26 on Humanities Commons 9 years ago
Blood Will Out: Jesus’ Circumcision and Early Christian Readings of Exodus 4:24-26
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Andrew Jacobs deposited The Kindest Cut: Christ’s Circumcision and the Signs of Early Christian Identity on Humanities Commons 9 years ago
Originally presented at McMaster University in May 2005.
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