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Acts of the Apostles and the Rhetoric of Roman Imperialism
註釋Cover -- Half-title -- Title page -- Copyright information -- Epigraph -- Table of contents -- List of Illustrations -- Acknowledgments -- List of abbreviations -- Introduction: Acts and Empire -- Review of Scholarship on Acts and Empire -- Dating Acts -- Overview of Chapters -- 1 Acts and Monumental Historiography -- What Kind of History? -- The Multimedia Context of Antiquity -- The Column of Trajan and the Rhetoric of Monumental Historiography -- Continuous Narrative Style -- Verisimilitude -- Encomiastic Rhetorical Style -- Conclusion: The Book of Acts as an Apostolic Monument -- 2 Imperial Virtues and Provincial Representations -- The Emperor in the Roman World -- Trajanic Indulgentia -- Trajanic Discourses of Imperium -- Trajanic Patterns of Provincial Representation -- Monumentalizing Trajan as Patron of the People -- Conclusion: Trajanic Standards of Representation -- 3 Paul and the Politics of a Public Portraiture -- Becoming Paul (Acts 8-13) -- Paul and the Patronage of Communities -- Paul in Lystra (Acts 14) -- Paul in Ephesus (Acts 19) -- Paul in Malta (Acts 27) -- The Political Significance of Universalism in Acts -- Representations of Provincials on the Column of Trajan -- Conclusion: The Politics of a Public Portraiture -- 4 Acts and Anti-Jewish Propaganda -- Narrative Representations of Paul's Jewish Opponents -- Acts 1-7, 12: Jerusalem -- Acts 9: Damascus -- Acts 13: Cyprus and Antioch -- Acts 14: Iconium and Lystra -- Acts 17: Thessalonica, Beroea, and Athens -- Acts 18-19: Corinth and Ephesus -- Acts 20-28: Final Voyage to Jerusalem -- Anti-Jewish Misanthropy in Acts and Antiquity -- Anti-Jewish Propaganda as Imperial Rhetoric -- Anti-Jewish Rhetoric during the Reign of Trajan -- Representations of Barbarians on the Column of Trajan -- Conclusion: Acts and Jewish Customs -- 5 Women, Gender, and Roman Imperial Masculinity