000 01714nam a2200337 a 4500
005 20260119071420.0
008 2024-06-25 11:15:25
020 _a9780195115673
041 _aeng
082 _a226.306
082 _bB915-C56
100 _aBryan, Christopher
100 _d1935-
100 _eAuthor
245 _aA Preface to Mark
245 _bNotes on the Gospel in Its Literary and Cultural Settings
245 _cChristopher Bryan
260 _aU.S.A.
260 _bOxford University Press
260 _c1993
300 _a220tr.
300 _bpaperback, illustration
300 _c22 cm
520 _aA Preface to Mark is a literary study which, from the standpoint of the newer critical methodologies, explores two questions. First, Bryan attempts to determine what kind of text Mark would have been seen to be, both by its author and by others who encountered it near the time of its writing. He examines whether Mark should be seen as an example of any particular literary type, and if so which. He concludes that a comparison of Mark with other texts of the period leads inevitably to the conclusion that Mark's contemporaries would broadly have characterized his work as a ""life."" Second, Bryan looks at the evidence that exists to indicate whether Mark , like so much else of its period, was written to be read aloud. He points out ways in which Mark's narrative would have worked particularly well as rhetoric.
650 _aBible -- NT -- Gospels -- Mark
650 _aGospel -- Mark
650 _aBible -- Criticism and Interpretation
856 4 _uhttps://data.thuviencodoc.org/books/14878/62.jpg
_yCover Image
911 _aLê Phước Thắng
957 _a231010TKH
999 _c14729
_d14729