Content:
Eduard Iricinschi and Holger Zellentin:
Introduction. From Heresy to Heresiology: Recent Trends in Scholarship and the Contribution of This Volume -
Karen L. King:
Social and Theological Effects of Heresiological Discourse -
William E. Arnal:
Doxa, Heresy, and Self-Construction. The Pauline Ekklesiai and the Boundaries of Urban Identities -
Averil Cameron:
The Violence of Orthodoxy - Yannis Papadoyannakis: Defining Orthodoxy in Pseudo-Justin's "Quaestiones et responsiones ad orthodoxos" -
Caroline Humfress:
Citizens and Heretics: Late Roman Lawyers on Christian Heresy -
Richard Lim:
The Nomen Manichaeorum and Its Uses in Late Antiquity -
Annette Yoshiko Reed:
Heresiology and the (Jewish-)Christian Novel: Narrativized Polemics in the Pseudo-Clementine Homilies -
Kevin Lee Osterloh:
Judea, Rome and the Hellenistic Oikoumenê: Emulation and the Reinvention of Communal Identity -
Philippa Townsend:
Who Were the First Christians? -
John G. Gager:
Where Does Luke's Anti-Judaism Come from? -
Holger Zellentin:
Margin of Error: Bavli Shabbat 116a-b as Polemics, Apology, and Heresiology -
Burton L. Visotzky:
Goys '?'n't Us: Rabbinic Anti-Gentile Polemic in Yerushalmi Berachot 9:1 -
Eduard Iricinschi:
If You Got It, Flaunt It: Religious Advertising in the Gospel of Philip -
Gregg Gardner:
Astrology in the Talmud: An Analysis of Bavli Shabbat 156 -
Israel Jacob Yuval:
The Other in Us: Liturgica, Poetica, Polemica