2 Corinthians: An Introduction and Study Guide: Crisis and Conflict
By (Author) Jay Twomey
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
T.& T.Clark Ltd
12th January 2017
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Criticism and exegesis of sacred texts
New Testaments
227.306
Paperback
112
Width 156mm, Height 234mm, Spine 10mm
200g
This guide considers the historical contexts, the literary forms, the social and rhetorical backgrounds, the politics, the theologies, and the reception of 2 Corinthians. Each chapter surveys recent scholarly approaches to the text, focussing especially on critical perspectives that mesh with our contemporary concerns about gender, identity, race and class. 2 Corinthians becomes, in the process, less the work of a single 1st-century writer than a set of fraught, even fractured negotiations between competing interests and impulses, conducted in Pauls voice. The last chapter brings the letter into conversation with Nathaniel Hawthornes short story The Ministers Black Veil in order to shift the terms of the critical discussion from what Paul meant to how Paul means in later cultural moments. Twomey introduces students to the way 2 Corinthians offers a fascinating but fragmentary glimpse into Pauls continuing ties with the Corinthian community. At the same time, Twomey shows how the letter is the site of many new critical challenges to traditional readings of Paul and early Christianity. In contrast to 1 Corinthians, this 2 Corinthians largely eschews the debates and discussions, the interests and concerns of Pauls correspondents. Instead we find Paul engaged in a multi-pronged defence of his ministry in and beyond Corinth. Over the course of thirteen chapters he runs the gamut of the emotions, rhetorically, from tears to joy to biting anger, while struggling to keep his relationship with (some say, his control over) the community intact.
2 Corinthians: Crisis and Conflict is a handy short volume with an excellent bibliography that is a must in any scholarly library and is a useful companion to the typically onerous commentaries on 2 Corinthians * Adam White, Review of Biblical Literature *
Crisp and succinct. * The Expository Times *
Jay Twomey is Associate Professor in the Department of English and Comparative Literature at the University of Cincinnati, USA.