For too long, the study of religious life in Late Antiquity has
relied on the premise that Jews, pagans, and Christians were
largely discrete groups divided by clear markers of belief, ritual,
and social practice. More recently, however, a growing body of
scholarship is revealing the degree to which identities in the late
Roman world were fluid, blurred by ethnic, social, and gender
differences. Christianness, for example, was only one of a
plurality of identities available to Christians in this period.
In Christians and Their Many Identities in Late Antiquity, North
Africa, 200 450 CE, Eric Rebillard explores how Christians in North
Africa between the age of Tertullian and the age of Augustine were
selective in identifying as Christian, giving salience to their
religious identity only intermittently. By shifting the focus from
groups to individuals, Rebillard more broadly questions the
existence of bounded, stable, and homogeneous groups based on
Christianness. In emphasizing that the intermittency of
Christianness is structurally consistent in the everyday life of
Christians from the end of the second to the middle of the fifth
century, this book opens a whole range of new questions for the
understanding of a crucial period in the history of
Christianity."
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