Freshly Printed - allow 4 days lead
The Nero-Antichrist
Founding and Fashioning a Paradigm
Refutes the commonly-held perception that Nero should be understood as the Antichrist figure in the Bible.
Shushma Malik (Author)
9781108491495, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 16 April 2020
242 pages
23.5 x 15.8 x 1.7 cm, 0.48 kg
It has traditionally been assumed that biblical writers considered Nero to be the Antichrist.. This book refutes that view. Beginning by challenging the assumption that literary representations of Nero as tyrant would have been easily recognisable to those in the eastern Roman empire, where most Christian populations were located, Shushma Malik then deconstructs the associations often identified by scholars between Nero and the Antichrist in the New Testament. Instead, she demonstrates that the Nero-Antichrist paradigm was a product of late antiquity. Using now firmly established traits and themes from classical historiography, late-antique Christians used Nero as a means with which to explore and communicate the nature of the Antichrist. This proved successful, and the paradigm was revived in the nineteenth century in the works of philosophers, theologians, and novelists to inform debates about the era's fin-de-siècle anxieties and religious controversies.
1. Introduction: Neronian Myths
2. Nero and the Bible
3. The Invention of the Nero-Antichrist
4. Reviving the Nero-Antichrist
5. Epilogue: The Legacy of Revival
Appendix A. List of Early-Christian References to the Nero-Antichrist
Bibliography
Index.
Subject Areas: Bibles [HRCF], Church history [HRCC2], Classical history / classical civilisation [HBLA1], Literature: history & criticism [DS], Literature & literary studies [D]