“‘Come over to Macedonia’: Networks, Landscapes, and Cultural Memory in Christian Literary Imagination.”

Cavan Concannon, University of Southern California

Cavan Concannon

University of Southern California

Cavan Concannon is Professor and John R. Tansey Chair in Christian Ethics in the School of Religion at the University of Southern California. His work considers early Christianity in the broader context of the ancient Mediterranean, forefronting theoretical and methodological concerns. He has also co-authored and edited (with Jill Hicks-Keaton) a book on The Museum of the Bible and contemporary American evangelical treatments of early Christianity, entitled Does Scripture Speak for Itself? The Museum of the Bible and the Politics of Interpretation (published 2022 with Cambridge University Press). He is the author of When You Were Gentiles’: Specters of Ethnicity in Roman Corinth and Paul's Corinthian Correspondence (published in 2014 with Cambridge University Press), Assembling Early Christianity: Trade, Networks, and the Letters of Dionysios of Corinth (published in 2017 with Cambridge University Press), and Profaning Paul (published in 2022 with University of Chicago Press).

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Sandra Blakely, "Patronage, networks and ritual strategies: Macedonians on Samothrace"

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Vassilis Evangelidis, "Connectivity, Identity, and the Built Environment in Roman Macedonia"