The contributors of this volume demonstrate how a highly developed expertise in interpreting Biblical and cognate literature is a substantial part of the overall discourse on the historical, literary, social, political, and religious dimensions of trauma in past and present. This idea is based on the assumption that trauma is not only a modern concept which derives from 20th century psychiatry: It is an ancient phenomenon already which predates modern discourses. Trauma studies will thus profit from how Theology - specifically Biblical exegesis - and the Humanities deal with trauma in terms of religion, history, sociology, and politics.
Trauma and Traumatization in Individual and Collective Dimensions : Insights from Biblical Studies and Beyond
bookThe Gospel of John as Genre Mosaic
bookThe True Human Being : The Figure of Jesus in K.E. Løgstrup's Thought
Maria Louise Louise Odgaard Møller
bookNordic Interpretations of the New Testament : Challenging Texts and Perspectives
bookPaul as homo novus : Authorial Strategies of Self-Fashioning in Light of a Ciceronian Term
bookCollected Studies on Philo and Josephus : Edited by Eve-Marie Becker, Morten Hørning Jensen and Jacob Mortensen
Per Bilde, Eve-Marie Becker
bookJames among the Classicists : Reading the Letter of James in Light of Ancient Literary Criticism
Sigurvin Lárus Jónsson
bookGenres of Mark : Reading Mark's Gospel from Micro and Macro Perspectives
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