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The Pseudo-Clementine Tradition

The Hermeneutics of Late-Ancient Sophistic Christianity

Expected online publication date:  15 September 2025

Benjamin M. J. De Vos
Affiliation:
Ghent University

Summary

This Element, through detailed example, scrutinizes the exact nature of Christian storytelling in the case of the Greek Pseudo-Clementines, or Klementia, and examines what exactly is involved in the correct interpretation of this Christian prose fiction as a redefined pepaideumenos. In the act of such reconsideration of paideia, Greek cultural capital, and the accompanying reflections on prose literature and fiction, it becomes clear that the Klementinist exploits certain cases of intertextual and meta-literary reflections on the Greek novelistic fiction, such as Chariton's Chaereas and Callirhoe and Achilles Tatius' Leucippe and Cleitophon, in order to evoke these reconsiderations of storytelling, interpretive hermeneutics, and one's role as a culturally Greek reader pepaideumenos. This Element argues that the Klementia bears witness to a rich, dynamic, and Sophistic context in which reflections on paideia, dynamics regarding Greek identity, and literary production were neatly intertwined with reflections on reading and interpreting truth and fiction.

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Type
Element
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Online ISBN: 9781009506694
Publisher: Cambridge University Press

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The Pseudo-Clementine Tradition
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The Pseudo-Clementine Tradition
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