Augustine and Tradition
Influences, Contexts, Legacy
Edited by: David G. Hunter and Jonathan P. Yates
501 Pages
- Hardcover
- ISBN: 9780802876997
- Published By: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company
- Published: November 2021
$80.00
Checkout as a guest, login to your user account or create a new user profile for faster check out the next time you submit a book review request.
An indispensable resource for those looking to understand Augustine’s place in religious and cultural heritage
Augustine towers over Western life, literature, and culture—both sacred and secular. His ideas permeate conceptions of the self from birth to death and have cast a long shadow over subsequent Christian thought. But as much as tradition has sprung from Augustinian roots, so was Augustine a product of and interlocutor with traditions that preceded and ran contemporary to his life.
This extensive volume examines and evaluates Augustine as both a receiver and a source of tradition. The contributors—all distinguished Augustinian scholars influenced by J. Patout Burns and interested in furthering his intellectual legacy—survey Augustine’s life and writings in the context of North African tradition, philosophical and literary traditions of antiquity, the Greek patristic tradition, and the tradition of Augustine’s Latin contemporaries. These various pieces, when assembled, tell a comprehensive story of Augustine’s significance, both then and now.
David G. Hunter is the Margaret O'Brien Flatley Chair of Catholic Theology at Boston College. A past president of the North American Patristics Society, he is the author of several monographs and coeditor of the Oxford Handbook of Early Christian Studies.
Jonathan P. Yates is professor of historical theology at Villanova University. In addition to coediting a two-volume handbook entitled The Bible in Christian North Africa, he served as editor of the international peer-reviewed academic journal Augustinian Studies for over ten years.