Home / Humanities / Religion / The Cambridge Companion to Augustine's “Confessions”

The Cambridge Companion to Augustine's “Confessions”

AUTHOR
Price
€28.80
€32.00 -10%
Upon request
Dispatched within 15 - 25 days.

Add to wishlist

This Cambridge Companion serves as an authoritative guide to Augustine's Confessions - a literary classic and one of the most important theological/philosophical works of Late Antiquity. Bringing together new essays by leading scholars, the volume first examines the composition of the text, including its structure, genre, and intended audience. Subsequent essays explore a range of themes and concepts, such as God, creation, sin, grace, happiness, and interiority, among others. The final section of the Companion deals with its historical relevance. It provides sample essays on the reception history of the Confessions. These essays demonstrate how each generation reads the Confessions in light of current questions and circumstances, and how the text continues to remain relevant and raise new questions.

Includes specifically commissioned chapters from world leading scholars in the field

Organised in three key sections: Circumstances of Composition, Main Themes and Topics, and Reception and Reading Strategies

Brings together a number of different readings and approaches to both raise new questions and demonstrate the continued relevance of Augustine's Confessions

Author: Toom Tarmo
Publisher: CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS
Pages: 354
ISBN: 9781108449816
Cover: Paperback
Edition Number: 1
Release Year: 2020
Introduction: what is The Cambridge Companion to Augustine's 'Confessions'? Tarmo Toom
Part I. Circumstances of Composition:
1. Title, time, and circumstances of composition Carolyn Hammond
2. Genre and structure of the Confessions Annemaré Kotzé
3. Anticipated readers Jason BeDuhn
Part II. Main Themes and Topics:
4. Aversion and conversion Marie-Anne Vannier
5. Creation and recreation Matthew Drever
6. Sin and concupiscence Johannes van Oort
7. Grace Volker Henning Drecoll
8. God Paul van Geest
9. Happiness and friendship Anne-Isabelle Bouton-Touboulic
10. Love, will, and the intellectual ascents Sarah Byers
11. Memory, time, and eternity Lenka Karfiková
12. Philosophy Giovanni Catapano
13. Pride and humility Notker Baumann
13. Soul, self, and interiority Phillip Cary
Part III. Reception and Reading Strategies:
14. Manuscript transmission, critical editions, and English translations Gert Partoens
15. Reception in the Middle Ages Eric Leland Saak
16. Reception in the period of reformations Katrin Ettenhuber
17. Reception during the enlightenment Patrick Riley

18. Reading (in) the Confessions Mark Vessey.

Tarmo Toom is Associate Professor of Historical Theology at the John Leland Center for Theological Studies and Professorial Lecturer at Georgetown University, Washington DC. Among other publications, he has edited Patristic Theories of Biblical Interpretation and Augustine in Context (Cambridge, 2016), as well as sections of The Brill Encyclopedia of Early Christianity.

You may also like

Newsletter

Subscribe to the newsletter to be the first to receive our new releases and offers
Your account Your wishlist