Joseph C. Miller Memorial Lecture by Jeremiah Coogan
What if enslaved and formerly enslaved literary workers played a crucial role in the composition of the Synoptic Gospels?
This lecture challenges assumptions in New Testament scholarship’s “Synoptic Problem,” which explores the literary relationships between Matthew, Mark, and Luke. By uncovering the invisible labor of these uncredited collaborators, this article reimagines gospel writing and expands the boundaries of New Testament studies.
This lecture challenges assumptions in New Testament scholarship’s “Synoptic Problem,” which explores the literary relationships between Matthew, Mark, and Luke. By uncovering the invisible labor of these uncredited collaborators, this article reimagines gospel writing and expands the boundaries of New Testament studies.
Zeit
Montag, 31.03.25 - 16:15 Uhr
- 17:45 Uhr
Themengebiet
"Synoptic Work: Roman Slavery, Gospel Writing, and Historical Imagination”
Zielgruppen
Studierende
Wissenschaftler*innen
Alle Interessierten
Sprachen
English
Ort
Online via Zoom & On site in Niebuhrstr. 5
Reservierung
erforderlich
Weitere Informationen
Veranstalter
BCDSS
Kontakt
Links
- https://www.dependency.uni-bonn.de/images/pdf-files/jcmml-pdf/abstract-coogan_homepage.pdf