Rhetoric and Religious Identity in Late Antiquity
Edited by Richard Flower and Morwenna Ludlow
Author Information
Edited by Richard Flower, Associate Professor in Classics and Late Antiquity, University of Exeter, and Morwenna Ludlow, Professor of Christian History and Theology, University of Exeter
Prof Richard Flower studied for his BA, MPhil and PhD in Classics at Clare College, Cambridge, and has worked at the Universities of Cambridge, Sheffield and Exeter. He specialises in the construction of imperial and ecclesiastical authority, particularly in late-antique polemical literature and heresiology. His publications include Emperors and Bishops in Late Roman Invective (Cambridge, 2013) and Imperial Invectives against Constantius II (Liverpool, 2016), and he is also editing The Cambridge Companion to Christian Heresy.
Prof Morwenna Ludlow studied Classics and then Theology at the University of Oxford. She has written widely on Gregory of Nyssa. Her latest book, Art, Craft and Theology in Fourth Century Greek Authors (also published by OUP) examines the use of literary and rhetorical tropes by Christian authors and argues that they interpret themselves as both theologians and craftsmen with words.
Contributors:
Nicholas Baker-Brian
Douglas Boin
Raffaella Cribiore
Susanna Elm
Richard Flower
Mark Humphries
Robin M. Jensen
Aaron P. Johnson
Maijastina Kahlos
Morwenna Ludlow
Éric Rebillard
Hajnalka Tamas
Shaun Tougher
Peter Van Nuffelen