Augustine and the Disciplines: From Cassiciacum to Confessions
Augustine and the Disciplines takes its cue from Augustine's theory of the liberal arts to explore the larger question of how the Bible became the focus of medieval culture in the West. Augustine himself became increasingly aware that an ambivalent attitude towards knowledge and learning was inherent in Christianity. By facing the intellectual challenge posed by this tension he arrived at a new theory of how to interpret the Bible correctly. The topics investigated here include: Augustine's changing relationship with the 'disciplines', as he moved from an attempt at their Christianization (in the philosophical dialogues of Cassiciacum) to a radical reshaping of them within a Christian world-view (in the De Doctrina Christiana and Confessiones); the factors that prompted and facilitated his change of perspective; and the ways in which Augustine's evolving theory reflected contemporary trends in Christian pedagogy.
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Augustine and the Disciplines: From Cassiciacum to Confessions
Augustine and the Disciplines takes its cue from Augustine's theory of the liberal arts to explore the larger question of how the Bible became the focus of medieval culture in the West. Augustine himself became increasingly aware that an ambivalent attitude towards knowledge and learning was inherent in Christianity. By facing the intellectual challenge posed by this tension he arrived at a new theory of how to interpret the Bible correctly. The topics investigated here include: Augustine's changing relationship with the 'disciplines', as he moved from an attempt at their Christianization (in the philosophical dialogues of Cassiciacum) to a radical reshaping of them within a Christian world-view (in the De Doctrina Christiana and Confessiones); the factors that prompted and facilitated his change of perspective; and the ways in which Augustine's evolving theory reflected contemporary trends in Christian pedagogy.
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Augustine and the Disciplines: From Cassiciacum to Confessions

Augustine and the Disciplines: From Cassiciacum to Confessions

Augustine and the Disciplines: From Cassiciacum to Confessions

Augustine and the Disciplines: From Cassiciacum to Confessions

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Overview

Augustine and the Disciplines takes its cue from Augustine's theory of the liberal arts to explore the larger question of how the Bible became the focus of medieval culture in the West. Augustine himself became increasingly aware that an ambivalent attitude towards knowledge and learning was inherent in Christianity. By facing the intellectual challenge posed by this tension he arrived at a new theory of how to interpret the Bible correctly. The topics investigated here include: Augustine's changing relationship with the 'disciplines', as he moved from an attempt at their Christianization (in the philosophical dialogues of Cassiciacum) to a radical reshaping of them within a Christian world-view (in the De Doctrina Christiana and Confessiones); the factors that prompted and facilitated his change of perspective; and the ways in which Augustine's evolving theory reflected contemporary trends in Christian pedagogy.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780191534539
Publisher: OUP Oxford
Publication date: 06/09/2005
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 752 KB

About the Author

Karla Pollmann is Professor of Classics and Head of the School of Humanities at the University of Reading. Mark Vessey is Professor of English, University of British Columbia.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction, Mark Vessey
I. Honesta studia: classrooms without walls
2. Disciplines of discipleship in late antique education: Augustine and Gregory Nazianzen, Neil McLynn
3. The duty of a teacher: liminality and disciplina in Augustine's De Ordine, Catherine Conybeare
II. Disciplinarum libri: the canon in question
4. Augustine's disciplines: silent diutius Musae Varronis?, Danuta R. Shanzer
5. Divination and the disciplines of knowledge according to Augustine, William E. Klingshirn
6. The vocabulary of the liberal arts in Augustine's Confessions, Philip Burton
III. Doctrina Christiana: beyond the disciplines
7. The grammarian's spoils: De Doctrina Christiana and the contexts of literary education, Catherine M. Chin
8. Augustine's critique of dialectic: between Ambrose and the Arians, Stefan Hessbruggen-Walter
9. Augustine's hermeneutics as a universal discipline?, Karla Pollmann

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