To celebrate the release of his book next week, Oxford University Press has kindly agreed to give away a copy of Hugh Houghton’s The Latin New Testament: A Guide to its Early History, Texts, and Manuscripts.
You can enter to win in any of the ways listed below. The contest closes at midnight (EST) on February 24th. We’ll announce the randomly-chosen winner in part 2 of our interview with Hugh.
Update: congrats to Drew Longacre who was the randomly-chosen winner!
a Rafflecopter giveaway
You can enter to win in any of the ways listed below. The contest closes at midnight (EST) on February 24th. We’ll announce the randomly-chosen winner in part 2 of our interview with Hugh.
Update: congrats to Drew Longacre who was the randomly-chosen winner!
a Rafflecopter giveaway
(Contest entry comment)
ReplyDeleteI would love to see interviews with experts on some of the early translations that are rarely discussed, e.g. Gothic or Armenian, or perhaps the somewhat later Slavonic and Arabic.
I would like to see an interview with John Cook on the ending of Mark.
ReplyDeleteI would love to see an interview with Amy Anderson. She is doing a lot of great work on Family 1.
ReplyDeleteAn interview with Jim Royse would be very nice!
ReplyDeleteWould love to see an interview with Eric Tully on his work the Peshitta of Hosea and how it relates to the MT and LXX!
ReplyDeleteI would like to read an interview with Daniel Wallace.
ReplyDeleteI would love to see an interview with Dan Wallace about the work of CSNTM at the National Library of Greece and all of the interesting discoveries made while working there.
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DeleteAgree with Timothy Mitchell. An interview with Amy Anderson would be really interesting.
ReplyDeleteI would love to see an interview with Moisés Silva on the text of the Greek Isaiah, especially, but perhaps also on the text of Galatians.
ReplyDeleteDaniel Wallace is always a good interview. His efforts to digitize manuscripts is laudable. His continuing discoveries of NT manuscripts provides ongoing work for textual critics. (Joseph Matos)
ReplyDeleteCharles Hill is a great candidate for an interview here. He's been to our blog dinners.
ReplyDeleteKeep them coming. For an interview with Dan Wallace, see here: http://evangelicaltextualcriticism.blogspot.co.uk/2006/03/interview-with-dan-wallace.html. Might be time for an update though.
ReplyDeleteI'd like to see an interview with Larry Hurtado
ReplyDeleteI second a Hurtado interview!
DeleteTim
Likewise!
DeleteHurtado or Wallace would be my pick.
ReplyDeleteNot sure If I needed to include (Contest Entry Comment)—but just to be safe that was my intention.
Delete(Contest entry comment)
ReplyDeleteI would be very glad to see an interview with scholar Antonio Piñero about his work on the multiplicity and diversity of textual portrayals of Jesus.
Thank you.
This comment has been removed by the author.
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DeleteOops... Should have known clicking Submit more than once would post my reply too many times!
DeleteJ. K. Elliott, has been mentioned in a dozen posts here in ETC and has mentioned ETC in his “Recent Trends in the Textual Criticism of the New Testament A New Millennium, a New Beginning?“, but has yet to be interviewed here.
ReplyDeleteI would ask him, in view of the accelerating availability of online digital images of manuscripts, to update his comments on arranging digital texts “in extenso” and achieving a comprehensive critical apparatus with patrisitic and versional citations in context.
I would like to see an interview with James Ronald Royse.
ReplyDeleteJakob van Bruggen (He becomes an octogenarian this year!)
ReplyDeleteBarbara Aland
Martin Heide
Michael Holmes
Ulrich Schmid
Klaus Wachtel
I'd love to see Larry Hurtado, too!
ReplyDeleteI would second Klaus Wachtel. I think he would make an interesting interview.
ReplyDeleteAnd, of course, eldon epp.
My recommendation is Lilia Diamantopouloum, Assistant Professor at the Dept of Byzantine and Modern Greek studies, University of Vienna. As a co-host of the 2014 Simonides conference in Vienna, Lilia should be able to help textual (criticism) analysts move outside their own cloistered club in discussing issues like aging mss, forgery and replica, significance of provenance, historical forensics, palaeography, art and heirogrlyphics, the significance of materials testing, etc.
ReplyDeleteWith all the recent discussions about 2427 and 2537, and the many recent revelations around Sinaiticus, and the ongoing brouhaha on other historical pieces like the Artemidorus papyrus (again Simonides in in the mix), the Archimedes Palimpsest (where Tischendorf stole a leaf) and the Vinland Map, textual writers could use a wider scholarship base.
Steven Avery
Lilia Diamantopoulou - (some characters glitched)
DeleteWhat about an interview with Philip Burton?
ReplyDeleteLarry Hurtado, Michael Holmes, Michael Kruger, Daniel Wallace, James White.
ReplyDeleteMy question is irelevant to this topic but is hugh houston also an evangelical?
ReplyDeleteHis name is Hugh Houghton.
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