Historical Jesus: What Can We Know and How Can We Know It
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Historical Jesus: What Can We Know and How Can We Know It  -     By: Anthony Le Donne

Historical Jesus: What Can We Know and How Can We Know It

Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co. / 2010 / Paperback

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Stock No: WW865267

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Demonstrating how historical memories are initially formed, Le Donne considers how people interpret sensory data in light of what they expect and what they've learned. He then offers a philosophy of history and uses it to outline three dimensions from Jesus' life---his "dysfunctional" family, his politics, and his final confrontation in Jerusalem. 112 pages, softcover from Eerdmans.

Product Information

Title: Historical Jesus: What Can We Know and How Can We Know It
By: Anthony Le Donne
Format: Paperback
Number of Pages: 112
Vendor: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co.
Publication Date: 2010
Dimensions: 9.00 X 6.00 (inches)
Weight: 7 ounces
ISBN: 0802865267
ISBN-13: 9780802865267
Stock No: WW865267

Publisher's Description

Historical Jesus asks two primary questions: What does “historical” mean? and How should we apply this to Jesus?

Anthony Le Donne begins with the unusual step of considering human perception — how sensory data from sight, sound, touch, taste, and smell are interpreted from the very beginning by what we expect, what we’ve learned, and how we categorize the world. In this way Le Donne shows how historical memories are initially formed. He continues with the nature of human memory and how it interacts with group memories. Finally, he offers a philosophy of history and uses it to outline three dimensions from the life of Jesus: his dysfunctional family, his politics, and his final confrontation in Jerusalem.

This little book is ideal for those with no background in religious studies — even those with no faith — who wish to better understand who Jesus was and how we can know what we do know about him.

Endorsements

This very readable and provocative book should provide an invigorating agenda for many discussion groups, particularly if they want to grapple seriously with postmodern views of history and the role of memory in recording the impact which Jesus made on his disciples.
-James D. G. Dunn
University of Durham

Anthony Le Donne's Historical Jesus is among the most remarkable of recent efforts to comprehend Jesus historically. Engaging, informative, and provocative, the book is at once a brilliant portrait of the historical Jesus and a valuable contribution to social memory scholarship. Le Donne's 'postmodern paradigm,' which includes an astute analysis of perception and memory, transcends postmodernism itself...No one can read Le Donne's book and fail to think in new ways about the historical Jesus.
-Barry Schwartz
University of Georgia

Some philosophers of history have underscored how closely interwoven are history as a narrative and the meaning attached to that history by those who tell it. History is not just the record of events but is inherently a matter of perspective. Anthony Le Donne here sets out in clear and accessible terms how this critical view of history has begun to exert a dramatic impact on our assessments of Jesus.
-Bruce Chilton
Bard College

In their obsession with authenticating individual sayings of Jesus as precious artifacts of a unique individual teacher, modernist mainline questers for the historical Jesus have ignored that Jesus must have communicated with followers. They have thus ignored the necessity of understanding oral communication and social memory in a distinctive historical context. Anthony Le Donne is one of the first to take both oral communication and social memory seriously. He takes some key steps toward rethinking how we might have knowledge of Jesus-in-context through an appreciation of the social memory of Jesus' followers.
-Richard Horsley
University of Massachusetts

A provocative look at the next wave of study of the Jesus of history. Accessible to general readers yet up to date with the latest developments in the field, Le Donne grounds his understanding of Jesus both in ancient sources and in a careful consideration of contemporary philosophy. Appealing to postmodernism as a way to better understand human perception, memory, and narrative, Le Donne gives us a high-tech look at the ancient and early stories of Jesus' life. He anchors Jesus carefully in the past but allows him to speak meaningfully to the present.
-Tom Thatcher
Cincinnati Christian University

As a rule postmodernism means historical skepticism...Le Donne opens the door to the past again, not by refusing postmodern historiography but by applying its insights. If all reality is interpretive reality--perception, memory, and history--it is possible to make responsible statements on the past and on the historical Jesus. His book is a convincing plea against historical resignation--written with lucidity, esprit, and common sense.
-Gerd Theissen
University of Heidelberg

Editorial Reviews

“This very readable and provocative book should provide an invigorating agenda for many discussion groups, particularly if they want to grapple seriously with postmodern views of history and the role of memory in recording the impact which Jesus made on his disciples.”
— James D. G. Dunn
University of Durham

“In their obsession with authenticating individual sayings of Jesus as precious artifacts of a unique individual teacher, modernist mainline questers for the historical Jesus have ignored that Jesus must have communicated with followers. They have thus ignored the necessity of understanding oral communication and social memory in a distinctive historical context. Anthony Le Donne is one of the first to take both oral communication and social memory seriously. He takes some key steps toward rethinking how we might have knowledge of Jesus-in-context through an appreciation of the social memory of Jesus’ followers.”
— Richard Horsley
University of Massachusetts

“A provocative look at the next wave of study of the Jesus of history. Accessible to general readers yet up to date with the latest developments in the field, Le Donne grounds his understanding of Jesus both in ancient sources and in a careful consideration of contemporary philosophy. Appealing to postmodernism as a way to better understand human perception, memory, and narrative, Le Donne gives us a high-tech look at the ancient and early stories of Jesus’ life. He anchors Jesus carefully in the past but allows him to speak meaningfully to the present.”
— Tom Thatcher
Cincinnati Christian University

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