Travel and the Making of a Pseudepigraphical Hero in Ancient Jewish and Early Christian Literature

Full title
Travel and the Making of a Pseudepigraphical Hero in Ancient Jewish and Early Christian Literature
Updated By
Research notes

SB/not checked/15/05/2024

Reference type
Author(s)
Uusimäki, Elisa
DeCock, Miriam
Year
2023
Journal / Book Title || Series Title
Early Christianity
Volume
14
Issue / Series Volume
4
Abbreviated Series Name
EC
Pages
462-476
Work type
Label
20/05/2024
Abstract

This article investigates the function of the travel motif in selected ancient Jewish and early Christian pseudepigrapha. It argues that accounts of transformative journeys are an overlooked aspect of this generative body of literature from antiquity. Though the use of the travel motif is not to be regarded as a necessary genre marker, it is remarkable that several pseudepigraphical writings narrate long-distance or cosmic movement of a protagonist who achieves a heightened or heroic status because of acquiring divine knowledge or encountering an aspect of the divine on the move. In most cases, moreover, it is an exemplary figure from the scriptural past who plays a decisive role in the perpetuation of textual tradition.