Philo of Alexandria: An Intellectual Biography

Front Cover
Yale University Press, Jan 9, 2018 - Biography & Autobiography - 336 pages
Philo was a Hellenistic Jewish philosopher who left behind one of the richest bodies of work from antiquity, yet his personality and intellectual development have remained a riddle. Maren Niehoff presents the first biography of Philo, arguing that his trip to Rome in 38 CE was a turning point in his life. There he was exposed not only to new political circumstances but also to a new cultural and philosophical environment.
Following the pogrom in Alexandria, Philo became active as the head of the Jewish embassy to Emperor Gaius and as an intellectual in the capital of the empire, responding to the challenges of his time and creatively reconstructing his identity, though always maintaining pride in the Jewish tradition. Philo’s trajectory from Alexandria to Rome and his enthusiastic adoption of new modes of thought made him a key figure in the complex negotiation between East and West.

From inside the book

Contents

philo as ambassador and author
3
Philos SelfFashioning in the Historical Writings
25
Power Exile and Religion in the Roman Empire
47
Roman Philosophy and the Jews
69
Creation Theology and Monotheism
93
Character and History in the Lives of the Biblical
109
Biblical Ladies in Roman Garb
131
Stoic Ethics in the Service of Jewish Law
149
Biblical Commentary
173
A Platonic Self
192
An Utterly Transcendent God and His Logos
209
Rejected Subverted and Advocated
225
Philo at the Crossroads of Judaism Hellenism
242
Bibliography
281
General Index
311
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2018)

Maren R. Niehoff, Max Cooper Professor of Jewish Thought at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, trained in Jerusalem, Berlin, and Oxford and at the Harvard Society of Fellows. She is the author of Jewish Exegesis and Homeric Scholarship in Alexandria, Philo on Jewish Identity and Culture, and The Figure of Joseph in Post-Biblical Jewish Literature. Niehoff received the Polonsky Prize for Creativity and Originality in the Humanistic Disciplines at the Hebrew University in 2011 and is widely regarded as one of the leading Philonists today.

Bibliographic information