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E-raamat: Material Culture and Women's Religious Experience in Antiquity: An Interdisciplinary Symposium

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  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 27-Sep-2021
  • Kirjastus: Lexington Books
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781793611949
  • Formaat - EPUB+DRM
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  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 27-Sep-2021
  • Kirjastus: Lexington Books
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781793611949

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How can material artifacts help illuminate the religious lives of women in antiquity? In what ways do archaeological and art historical studies recover womens religious perspectives and experiences that the literary record misses or underrepresents? The authors of the essays in this volume set out to answer such questions in fascinating, new case studies of women and ancient religions in the Near East and Mediterranean world. They cover a broad historical, geographic, and religious spectrum as they explore womens lives from the time of ancient Egypt in the second millennium BCE into the early medieval period, from the Syrian Desert to Western Europe, in the religious traditions of Egypt, Canaan, Greece, Rome, ancient Israel, early Judaism, and early Christianity. Working at the intersections of religion, archaeology, art history, and womens history, these authors make fresh contributions to interdisciplinary studies, and their essays will be of interest to students and scholars across these academic fields.

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The fascinating essays in this book make an important contribution to the scholarship seeking to recover womens religious experience in antiquity. They show how archaeological and iconographic evidence can be invaluable in the quest to recover the lived experience of women in the pastfrom ancient Egypt to late ancient Christianity. Using material remains, the authors provide compelling arguments about womens religiosity that often differ from the impression one gets from texts alone. This readable and well-illustrated book is a must for both scholars and general readers. -- Carol Meyers, Duke University This new study is important for its focus on retrieving womens experiences in ancient religion through evidence from material cultureareas so often underrepresented in past discussions. Its eleven well-illustrated chapters offer a rich spread of case studies that cross time and space, people and objects, from an Egyptian woman of the thirteenthtwelfth centuries BCE to Merovingian rings of the fifth to eight century CE. Individually fresh and insightful about womens devotional experiences (some material has not been published before), they also have great strength as a collection since the rewards of such an ambitious range of topics are the many common questions and issues to emerge. -- Janet Huskinson, The Open University, UK This volume presents new material and asks searching questions about what material culture can tell us about womens religion in early Christianity and the ancient Mediterranean. As one of the editors says, if some of them are ultimately unanswerable, it does not necessarily follow that they are not worth asking and pursuing, and they are to be congratulated for opening exciting new perspectives in the growing field of material religion. -- Averil Cameron, University of Oxford

Introduction vii
Mark D. Ellison
Catherine Gines Taylor
Carolyn Osiek
1 Between the Holy and the Ordinary: Women's Lives in Early Christianity
1(24)
Carolyn Osiek
2 Transferring and Transforming Religious Identity Abroad: The Personal Adornment of an Egyptian Woman in Canaan
25(28)
Krystal V. L. Pierce
3 Besieged Maternity: Reading Textual Cannibalism in the Hebrew Bible through Material Culture
53(18)
Susannah M. Larry
4 Material Expression and Mantic Performance: An Examination of Women's Religious Experience at the Time of Josiah
71(26)
Amanda Colleen Brown
5 "Part of the Same Miracle": Women and Visual Art in the Dura Europos Synagogue
97(28)
Sarah E. G. Fein
6 Female Experience at the Tomb: Ritual Commemoration and Sarcophagus Imagery
125(22)
Sarah Madole Lewis
7 Assessing the Roles of Women in New Syrian Funerary Reliefs in Japanese Collections
147(22)
Kerry Hull
Lincoln H. Blumell
8 Foreseeing the Divine Bridal Chamber: A Household of Mosaics from Shahba-Philippopolis
169(44)
Catherine Gines Taylor
9 Reimagining and Reimaging Eve in Early Christianity
213(44)
Mark D. Ellison
10 Female Materialities at the Altar: Mary's Priestly Motherhood and Women's Eucharistic Experience in Late Antique and Byzantine Churches
257(46)
Maria Evangelatou
11 Rings on Her Fingers: Merovingian Rings and Religion in Late Antiquity
303(34)
Isabel Moreira
Index 337(6)
About the Contributors 343
Mark D. Ellison is associate professor in the Department of Ancient Scripture at Brigham Young University.

Catherine Gines Taylor is Hugh W. Nibley Postdoctoral Fellow at the Neal A. Maxwell Institute for Religious Scholarship at Brigham Young University.

Carolyn Osiek is Charles Fischer Professor of New Testament emerita at Brite Divinity School, Texas Christian University.