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Texts, teachers and pupils in the writings of Gregory of Nyssa

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posted on 2025-07-31, 14:06 authored by Morwenna Ludlow
Book chapter: Published as Morwenna Ludlow, Texts, teachers and pupils in the writings of Gregory of Nyssa in L. Van Hoof and P. Van Nuffelen, Literature and Society in the Fourth Century AD. Performing Paideia, constructing the present, presenting the self. Mnemosune supplements 373, 83-102 (Brill, Leiden, 2015). Late Antiquity is often assumed to have witnessed the demise of literature as a social force and its retreat into the school and the private reading room: whereas the sophists of the Second Sophistic were influential social players, their late antique counterparts are thought to have been overshadowed by bishops. Literature and Society in the Fourth Century AD argues that this presumed difference should be attributed less to a fundamental change in the role of literature than to different scholarly methodologies with which Greek and Latin texts from the second and the fourth century are being studied. Focusing on performance, the literary construction of reality and self-presentation, this volume highlights how literature continued to play an important role in fourth-century elite society.

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Notes

This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Brill via http://www.brill.com/products/book/literature-and-society-fourth-century-ad

Publisher

Brill

Book title

Literature and Society in the Fourth Century AD. Performing Paideia, constructing the present, presenting the self.

Editors

Van Hoof, L; Van Nuffelen, P

Place published

Leiden

Language

en

Department

  • Classics, Ancient History, Religion and Theology

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