Early Christianity and the Challenge of Writing History
Insights from Retrospective Approaches
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Publishing:31st Oct '25
£95.00
This title is due to be published on 31st October, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

This book shows how interpreters themselves can be one of the biggest challenges for the writing of early Christian history.
Proposing a contemporary, post-postmodern reading of history that goes far beyond the field of Early Christianity, this study interrogates traditional historical approaches and challenges scholars and students to contradict, engage with, and argue over established interpretations of events.What is the biggest challenge for the writing of early Christian history? As Markus Vinzent suggests in this study, it is not the interpretation of material evidence. Rather, it is the interpreter herself or himself. Unlike most historical studies, which aim at keeping to sources, facts, and close readings of texts as objectively as possible, Vinzent here offers a new approach: autobiographical historiography and personal methodological reflection, including test cases that advocate transparency, courage, and willingness to be challenged. He takes the reader on a journey through the notions of 'space', 'space in-between', 'the argument from silence', 'cognitive historiography' and 'evolution', 'time', 'scholarship', 'evidence/fact', 'tradition' and 'future'. Proposing a contemporary, post-postmodern reading of history that goes far beyond the field of Early Christianity, Vinzent's anachronological study interrogates traditional historical approaches and challenges both conservative and progressive scholars and students to contradict, engage with, and argue over established interpretations of events.
ISBN: 9781009638203
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
350 pages