The Past as Legacy: Luke-Acts and Ancient Epic

This book is a wonderful study. It is widely acknowledged that Luke-Acts, the largest single literary work in the New Testament, has incorporated a number of stylistic elements and literary motifs from the Septuagint. The precise manner and underlying significance of this appropriation of the Israelite past, however, are issues that have yet to be convincingly resolved. Indeed, although a broad consensus of current scholarship categorizes Luke-Acts as Hellenistic historiography, no major interpretive advances have developed from this hermeneutical model since the work of Hans Conzelmann in the 1950s. Conversely, more recent attempts to relate Luke- Acts to historical fiction have foundered on the problem of the inherently trivializing literary perspective of the ancient Greek novel. This study addresses the genre and interpretation of Luke-Acts in the light of its historical, social, literary, and ideological milieu

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