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Contemporary scholars are fascinated by the interplay of Christian content and pagan literary forms in the writing of fourth-century theologian Gregory of Nazianzus. This intersection emerges from Gregory’s treatment of examples from myth, which are often qualified as πλάσμα (“fabrication”) and μῦθος (“story”), in opposition to ἀλήθεια, denoting historical reality. This workshop explores the mismatch between truth and fiction in a selection of Gregory’s prose and poetic texts that discuss the use of mythic paradigms. By skillfully weaving allegory and myth in some of his epigrams κατὰ τυμβωρύχων (“against tomb violators”) and passages from Orations 4-5, Gregory asserts his place in the classical tradition.
Respondent: Emmanuel Bourbouhakis Classics and Hellenic Studies
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Image: © Marie-Lan Nguyen / Wikimedia Commons. Gregory of Nazianzus, 12th-century mosaic, Church of St. Mary of the Admiral (known as La Martorana), Palermo, Italy.
- Sponsored by the Seeger Center for Hellenic Studies
- Cosponsored by the Committee for the Study of Late Antiquity