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Books, Scribes, and Cultures of Reading in the Shepherd of Hermas

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 June 2021

TRAVIS W. PROCTOR*
Affiliation:
Department of Religion, Wittenberg University, 200 W Ward Street, Springfield, Ohio 45504, USA
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Abstract

In this article, I analyse how the Shepherd of Hermas constructs an ancient Christian reading culture through concurrent portrayals of Christian reading, copying and book production. I argue that, by portraying its protagonist Hermas as an idealised reader, scribe and auditor, the Shepherd constructs an early Christian reading culture that authenticates Hermas's role as prophet, activates the textual dissemination of the Shepherd and ritualises the practice of Christian auditory ‘reading’. The article closes with ‘Hermas the freedman’, which considers how Hermas's self-presentation as a formerly enslaved person may have connections to the Shepherd's centralisation of ancient reading cultures.

Information

Type
Eusebius Prize Essay
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2021