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John, Jesus, and the Renewal of Israel is unavailable, but you can change that!

This innovative study is the first to consider the Gospel of John as story in the ancient media context of oral communication and oral performance. Richard Horsley and Tom Thatcher creatively combine the fields of Jesus studies and ancient media studies in their analysis. Taking the main conflict evident in John’s story of Jesus as the key to its plot, they discern how this Gospel portrays Jesus...

that communications in antiquity were predominantly oral. In the initial excitement of the scholarly “discovery” that ancient societies were dominated by oral communication, a stark contrast was drawn between literacy and orality as two distinct mentalities. In retrospect, what appeared to be a “great divide” between orality and literacy turned out to be mainly between the print-culture in which Western scholarship and modern culture more generally are deeply embedded and the oral communications
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