The fourth-century Christian thinker, Gregory of Nyssa, has been the subject of a huge variety of interpretations over the past fifty years, from historians, theologians, philosophers, and others. In this highly original study, Morwenna Ludlow analyses these recent readings of Gregory of Nyssa and asks: What do they reveal about modern and postmodern interpretations of the Christian past? What do they say about the nature of Gregory's writing? Working thematically through studies of recent Trinitarian theology, Christology, spirituality, feminism, and postmodern hermeneutics, Ludlow develops an approach to reading the Church Fathers which combines the benefits of traditional scholarship on the early Church with reception-history and theology.
Ludlow Flower, LUDLOW FLOWER, Richard Flower, Morwenna Ludlow, University of Exeter) Flower, Richard (Associate Professor in Classics and Late Antiquity, Associate Professor in Classics and Late Antiquity, University of Exeter) Ludlow, Morwenna (Professor of Christian History and Theology, Professor of Christian History and Theology
Morwenna Ludlow, Charlotte Methuen, Andrew Spicer, Morwenna (University of Exeter) Ludlow, Charlotte (University of Glasgow) Methuen, Andrew (Oxford Brookes University) Spicer
Morwenna Ludlow, Charlotte Methuen, Andrew Spicer, Morwenna (University of Exeter) Ludlow, Charlotte (University of Glasgow) Methuen, Andrew (Oxford Brookes University) Spicer
Ludlow Flower, LUDLOW FLOWER, Richard Flower, Morwenna Ludlow, University of Exeter) Flower, Richard (Associate Professor in Classics and Late Antiquity, Associate Professor in Classics and Late Antiquity, University of Exeter) Ludlow, Morwenna (Professor of Christian History and Theology, Professor of Christian History and Theology