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E-raamat: Letters of Jerome: Asceticism, Biblical Exegesis, and the Construction of Christian Authority in Late Antiquity [Oxford Scholarship Online e-raamatud]

(Assistant Professor of Classics at the University of Colorado)
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In the centuries following his death, Jerome (c.347-420) was venerated as a saint and as one of the four Doctors of the Latin church. In his own lifetime, however, he was a severely marginalized figure whose intellectual and spiritual authority did not go unchallenged, at times not even by those in his inner circle. His ascetic theology was rejected by the vast majority of Christian contemporaries, his Hebrew scholarship was called into question by the leading Biblical authorities of the day, and the reputation he cultivated as a pious monk was compromised by allegations of moral impropriety with some of his female disciples.

In view of the extremely problematic nature of his profile, how did Jerome seek to bring credibility to himself and his various causes? In this book, the first of its kind in any language, Andrew Cain answers this crucial question through a systematic examination of Jerome's idealized self-presentation across the whole range of his extant epistolary corpus. Modern scholars overwhelmingly either access the letters as historical sources or appreciate their aesthetic properties. Cain offers a new approach and explores the largely neglected but nonetheless fundamental propagandistic dimension of the correspondence. In particular, he proposes theories about how, and above all why, Jerome used individual letters and letter-collections to bid for status as an expert on the Bible and ascetic spirituality.
List of Abbreviations
xi
Introduction 1(12)
`The Voice of One Calling in the Desert'
13(30)
Epistularum ad diversos liber: Structure and Contents
13(7)
Hieronymus eremita: The Textualized `Saint'
20(5)
Rhetoric and Reproach
25(5)
An Ascetic Conversion Story in Letters
30(3)
Introducing...Jerome
33(10)
A Pope and His Scholar
43(25)
Jerome on Damasus on Jerome: Revisionist Reminiscences
43(5)
The Great Commission
48(5)
The Correspondence: `Hebrew Verity' and Ambrosiaster
53(15)
Claiming Marcell
68(31)
Ad Marcellam epistularum liber: Structure and Contents
68(3)
Hagiography, Hermeneutics, Hebrew, and Heretics
71(18)
Sealing a Spiritual and Scholarly Legacy
89(10)
Expulsion from Rome
99(30)
Theological Controversy
100(2)
The Gathering Storm: Blesilla's Death
102(3)
The Beginning of the End
105(1)
The `Disgrace of a False Charge'
106(4)
Paula's Seducer?
110(4)
The Case against Jerome: Trial and Conviction
114(10)
Exile of a `Prophet'
124(5)
The Embattled Ascetic Sage
129(39)
Jerome's Personal, Theological, and Ecclesiastical Profiles
130(14)
Jerome's Spiritual Advice
144(22)
Legitimization
166(2)
The Exegetical Letters
168(29)
Remembering Fabiola, Defending Hebrew Verity
171(7)
From Bethlehem to the Furthest Reaches of Gaul
178(3)
Ep. 120 to Hedibia (Bordeaux)
181(7)
Ep. 121 to Algasia (Cahors?)
188(6)
Cultivated Image
194(3)
Conclusion
197(8)
Appendices
205(24)
Appendix I. Classifying the Letters: A New Taxonomy
207(13)
Appendix II. Lost Letters of Jerome
220(3)
Appendix III. The Manuscript Tradition
223(6)
Bibliography 229(44)
General Index 273(8)
Index of Ancient Sources 281