{"product_id":"speech-in-character-diatribe-and-romans-3-1-9-who-s-speaking-when-and-why-it-matters-9789004373280","title":"Speech-in-Character, Diatribe, and Romans 3:1-9: Who’s Speaking When and Why It Matters","description":"\u003cb\u003eBook Synopsis\u003c\/b\u003e\u003cbr\u003eIn Speech-in-Character, Diatribe, and Romans 3:1-9, Justin King argues that the rhetorical skill of speech-in-character (prosopopoiia, sermocinatio, conformatio) offers a methodologically sound foundation for understanding the script of Paul’s imaginary dialogue with an interlocutor in Romans 3:1-9. King focuses on speech-in-character’s stable criterion that attributed speech should be appropriate to the characterization of the speaker. Here, speech-in-character helps to inform which voice in the dialogue speaks which lines, and the general goals of diatribe help shape how an “appropriate” understanding of the script is best interpreted. King’s analyses of speech-in-character, diatribe, and Romans, therefore, make independent contributions while simultaneously working together to advance scholarship on a much debated passage in one of history’s most important texts.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\u003cb\u003eTable of Contents\u003c\/b\u003e\u003cbr\u003eAcknowledgments  List of Illustrations and Tables    1 Introduction   Staging the Project   Methodology   Significance   An Outline: A Preview to the Project    Part 1: Speech-in-Character    Introduction to Part 1    2 Speech-in-Character in the Rhetorical Handbooks   Pseudo-Cicero: Rhetorica ad Herennium   Quintilian: Institutio Oratoria   Summary: Ad Herennium and Quintilian on Speech-in-Character    3 Speech-in-Character in the Progymnasmata   Theon: Προγυμνάσματα   [Hermogenes]: Προγυμνάσματα   Summary: Theon and [Hermogenes] on Speech-in-Character    4 Speech-in-Character: A Synthesis   Core Conventions of Speech-in-Character   Unique Features of Speech-in-Character    5 Examples of Speech-in-Character in Paul   Examples of Speech-in-Character in Paul   Conclusion    Part 2: Diatribe    Introduction to Part 2    6 Portrayals of Diatribe   Conclusion    7 Examples of Diatribal Dialogue   Introduction   Dialogue and Attributed Speech in Primary Sources for Diatribe   Conclusions    Part 3: Romans 3:1–9    Introduction to Part 3    8 Traditional Readings of the Dialogue in Rom 3:1–9 and Its Role in the Letter   Pre-Bultmannian Readings of Romans 3:1–9   Diatribal Readings that Affirm the Traditional Script of Romans 3:1–9   Preliminary Conclusions    9 Rescriptive Readings of the Dialogue in Romans 3:1–9 and Its Role in the Letter   Non-Diatribal Critique of Traditional Readings   Rescriptive Readings of the Dialogue of Romans 3:1–9   Preliminary Conclusions    10 Romans 1–2: The Ethnically Inclusive and Impartial Gospel and the Characterization of the Interlocutor   Romans 1:1–12   Romans 1:13–15   Romans 1:16–17   Romans 1:18–32   Romans 2   Romans 2:1–11   Romans 2:12–16   Romans 2:17–29    11 Romans 3:1–9 and the Argument of Romans   Romans 3:1–9   Romans 3:1–9 and the Remainder of Romans   Conclusion    12 Conclusion    Bibliography  Index","brand":"Brill","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":53210754777431,"sku":"9789004373280","price":116.8,"currency_code":"GBP","in_stock":false}],"url":"https:\/\/bookcurl.com\/products\/speech-in-character-diatribe-and-romans-3-1-9-who-s-speaking-when-and-why-it-matters-9789004373280","provider":"Book Curl","version":"1.0","type":"link"}