sv=Böcker, serier, mm.|en=Books, series, etc.|fi=Kirjoja, sarjoja, ym.|
https://www.doria.fi:443/handle/10024/66987
2024-03-29T14:06:36ZVardagens triviala allvar och berättandets kraft : En festskrift till professor Lena Marander-Eklund
https://www.doria.fi:443/handle/10024/188695
Vardagens triviala allvar och berättandets kraft : En festskrift till professor Lena Marander-Eklund
Arvidsson, Alf; Asplund Ingemark, Camilla; Fjell, Tove Ingebjørg; Gunnemark, Kerstin; Hagström, Charlotte; Hyltén-Cavallius, Charlotte; Hyltén-Cavallius, Sverker; Kaijser, Lars; Klinkmann, Sven-Erik; Koskinen-Koivisto, Eerika; Meurling, Birgitta; Nilsson, Fredrik; Nylund Skog, Susanne; Palmenfelt, Ulf; Rothlind, Susanne; Ruotsala, Helena; Wolf-Knuts, Ulrika; Österlund-Pötzsch, Susanne
Henriksson, Blanka; Nylund Skog, Susanne
2024-03-11T11:43:57ZUnderlag för skyddsområdesvalsanalysen med MARXAN, Åland 2021 : Datakatalog med faktablad -Remissrunda för att erhålla kommentarer (Deadline 31.12.2021)
https://www.doria.fi:443/handle/10024/188679
Underlag för skyddsområdesvalsanalysen med MARXAN, Åland 2021 : Datakatalog med faktablad -Remissrunda för att erhålla kommentarer (Deadline 31.12.2021)
Rinne, Henna; Salovius-Laurén, Sonja
2024-03-05T09:57:14ZThe Innovation of a Master Wonder-worker in the Character of Simon Peter
https://www.doria.fi:443/handle/10024/188669
The Innovation of a Master Wonder-worker in the Character of Simon Peter
Berglund, Carl Johan
Simon Peter undergoes a considerable development from his first introduction in the Gospel of Mark to later narratives, where he gains remarkable miraculous abilities. In Mark, he witnesses Jesus performing numerous miracles without himself being named as the performer of a single one, but in Matthew’s Gospel Peter walks on water (Matt 14:22–33), in Acts he heals two paralytics and raises a woman from the dead (Acts 3:1–10; 9:32–42), and in the fourth-century Latin Acts of Peter, also known as Actus Vercellenses, he makes a dog speak (Acts Pet. 9.9–15), miraculously restores a shattered marble statue (11.8–23) and revives several people from the dead (27.1–11; 28.63–66). This article examines how Peter’s various miracles contribute to their respective stories, analyses how they reflect the needs of their respective authors, and discusses what they tell us about the use of genre in the narrative tradition about the apostle Peter and his miracles.
2024-02-28T08:55:28ZSuppressed, Adopted and Invented Memories. The Death of Jesus in the Gospel of John
https://www.doria.fi:443/handle/10024/188667
Suppressed, Adopted and Invented Memories. The Death of Jesus in the Gospel of John
Syreeni, Kari
The Gospel of John reflects several layers of social memory and theological creativity concerning Jesus’s death. In the early material, there seems to be a suppressed awareness of Jesus’s fate and an unwillingness to unfold it in narrative form – something that recalls the hypothetical sayings gospel Q and the Gospel of Thomas. There is also a search for alternative, figurative ways to visualize the endpoint of Jesus’s earthly life. Eventually, the narrative memory of Jesus’s passion, as told in Mark and Matthew, was adopted with some modifications. Among the modifications of the passion storyline is the narrativization of the image of Jesus as a Paschal Lamb, an image already known to Paul. The most remarkable innovation, however, was the figure of the “Beloved Disciple” as an eyewitness to Jesus’s passion and death.
2024-02-28T08:50:50Z