
No Extant Text Gives So Vivid A Glimpse Into The Experience Of An Ancient Prisoner As Paul's Letter To The Philippians. As A Letter From Prison, However, It Is Not What One Would Expect. For Although It Is True That Paul, Like Some Other Ancient Prisoners, Speaks In Philippians Of His Yearning For Death, What He Expresses Most Conspicuously Is Contentment And Even Joy. Setting Aside Pious Banalities That Contrast True Joy With Happiness, And Leaving Behind Too Heroic Depictions That Take Their Cue From Acts, Abject Joy Offers A Reading Of Paul's Letter As Both A Means And An Artifact Of His Provisional Attempt To Make Do. By Outlining The Uses Of Punitive Custody In The Administration Of Rome's Eastern Provinces And Describing The Prison's Complex Place In The Social And Moral Imagination Of The Roman World, This Book Provides A Richly Drawn Account Of Paul's Subelite Social Context, Where Bodies And Their Affects Were Shaped By Acute Contingency And Habitual Susceptibility To Violent Subjugation. Informed By Recent Work In The History Of Emotions, And With Comparison To Modern Prison Writing And Ethnography Provoking New Questions And Insights, Abject Joy Describes Paul's Letter As An Affective Technology, Wielded At Once On Paul Himself And On His Addressees, That Works To Strengthen His Grasp On The Very Joy He Names--
This book investigates how the Apostle Paul’s letter to the Philippians functions as an affective technology that allowed him to navigate the constraints of Roman imprisonment. Ryan S. Schellenberg, a scholar of early Christianity, utilizes historical data regarding the administration of Rome’s eastern provinces and the social reality of ancient incarceration to reframe Paul’s expressions of joy. By moving away from purely theological or heroic interpretations, the author argues that the letter serves as a practical, provisional strategy for maintaining psychological and social stability under the threat of violent subjugation.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and students of biblical studies frequently note the academic rigor and interdisciplinary approach Schellenberg brings to the study of Pauline epistles. Experts highlight this work as a significant contribution to the social-scientific criticism of the New Testament, particularly for its focus on the intersection of power, emotion, and incarceration.
Page Count:
0
Publication Date:
2021-01-01
ISBN-10:
0190065524
ISBN-13:
9780190065522
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