Dual Conventions : The Oral Delivery of New Testament Writings in Light of First-Century Delivery Practices
(2016) In Novum Testamentum Et Orbis Antiquus/Studien zur Umwelt des Neuen Testaments (NTOA/StUNT) 116. p.111-124- Abstract
- Nässelqvist’s contribution examines different models for understanding the oral delivery of New Testament writings. He finds evidence in favor of the existence in antiquity of both oral performance from memory and public reading directly from a manuscript. These types of oral delivery not only involved different delivery practices, but were also used in dissimilar settings for distinct text genres. For example, Nässelqvist finds that oral performance was largely confined to the delivery of oratory and drama, whereas public reading was used for all literary genres (including oratory and drama). In the second half of the chapter, Nässelqvist examines early Christian sources and finds that they describe the oral delivery of New Testament... (More)
- Nässelqvist’s contribution examines different models for understanding the oral delivery of New Testament writings. He finds evidence in favor of the existence in antiquity of both oral performance from memory and public reading directly from a manuscript. These types of oral delivery not only involved different delivery practices, but were also used in dissimilar settings for distinct text genres. For example, Nässelqvist finds that oral performance was largely confined to the delivery of oratory and drama, whereas public reading was used for all literary genres (including oratory and drama). In the second half of the chapter, Nässelqvist examines early Christian sources and finds that they describe the oral delivery of New Testament writings in terms of public reading (rather than as oral performance, a notion forwarded by scholars engaged in performance criticism). Finally, the practical details of the two types of delivery are compared in relation to the stance of the performer, the skills required, and the use of gestures, movement, facial expressions, vocal expression, manuscripts, and furniture. (Less)
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- author
- Nässelqvist, Dan LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2016-09
- type
- Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- Public Reading, Oral Performance, reading culture, New Testament Studies, Oral Delivery, Delivery Practices
- host publication
- Social Memory and Social Identity in the Study of Early Judaism and Early Christianity
- series title
- Novum Testamentum Et Orbis Antiquus/Studien zur Umwelt des Neuen Testaments (NTOA/StUNT)
- editor
- Byrskog, Samuel ; Hakola, Raimo and Jokiranta, Jutta Maria
- volume
- 116
- pages
- 14 pages
- publisher
- Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht
- ISSN
- 1420-4592
- ISBN
- 978-35-2559-375-2
- 9783647593753
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- 32ba144e-c327-4a02-afd3-93739c9bcc4e
- date added to LUP
- 2016-06-08 13:05:06
- date last changed
- 2021-02-10 12:18:05
@inbook{32ba144e-c327-4a02-afd3-93739c9bcc4e, abstract = {{Nässelqvist’s contribution examines different models for understanding the oral delivery of New Testament writings. He finds evidence in favor of the existence in antiquity of both oral performance from memory and public reading directly from a manuscript. These types of oral delivery not only involved different delivery practices, but were also used in dissimilar settings for distinct text genres. For example, Nässelqvist finds that oral performance was largely confined to the delivery of oratory and drama, whereas public reading was used for all literary genres (including oratory and drama). In the second half of the chapter, Nässelqvist examines early Christian sources and finds that they describe the oral delivery of New Testament writings in terms of public reading (rather than as oral performance, a notion forwarded by scholars engaged in performance criticism). Finally, the practical details of the two types of delivery are compared in relation to the stance of the performer, the skills required, and the use of gestures, movement, facial expressions, vocal expression, manuscripts, and furniture.}}, author = {{Nässelqvist, Dan}}, booktitle = {{Social Memory and Social Identity in the Study of Early Judaism and Early Christianity}}, editor = {{Byrskog, Samuel and Hakola, Raimo and Jokiranta, Jutta Maria}}, isbn = {{978-35-2559-375-2}}, issn = {{1420-4592}}, keywords = {{Public Reading; Oral Performance; reading culture; New Testament Studies; Oral Delivery; Delivery Practices}}, language = {{eng}}, pages = {{111--124}}, publisher = {{Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht}}, series = {{Novum Testamentum Et Orbis Antiquus/Studien zur Umwelt des Neuen Testaments (NTOA/StUNT)}}, title = {{Dual Conventions : The Oral Delivery of New Testament Writings in Light of First-Century Delivery Practices}}, volume = {{116}}, year = {{2016}}, }