Review
"Many of the questions raised by these essays are of intrinsic value for the historian of the early church...Anyone interested in issues of multi-culturalism and cultural identity will find in this book examples and models of necessary scholarly sophistication." Trinity Journal
"...this is an exciting and challenging collection...it raises the bar for studies of the intersecting configurations of identity, culture, and empire.... Goldhill suggests that these essays be taken as snapshots; I offer that he has produced a splendid collage." American Journal of Philology
"Each essay informs; many challenge received assumptions...Goldhill's introduction - a major interpretative essay in itself - critically supplements the bibliography, defines issues, elaborates context, and thus provides thematic unity. To comprehend better the complexities literary, social, and religious of Hellenic societies within the Roman political orbit, read herein with profit and pleasure." CHOICE
"This is a major contribution to our understanding of 'Greekness' in the period of the Second Sophistic. It is an excellent volume deserving wide reading by anyone interested in the question of identity formation in the Roman empire." Religious Studies Review
"The articles [are] persuasive, and the volume as a whole a considerable stimulant for my own researches and teaching....[It provides] useful information and perspectives that need to be engaged by anyone who studies the literature, culture or history of the periods in question. And for those who wish to learn more about thses approaches and this area of study, this volume is very useful indeed." Classical Bulletin
Book Description
This book explores the cultural conflicts of the second-century CE Roman Empire, through the perspective of Greek writings. The specially commissioned essays investigate the intellectual and social tensions in the era which gave rise to Christianity.