Women in Their Place: Paul and the Corinthian Discourse of Gender and Sanctuary SpaceA&C Black, 2005 M05 1 - 240 páginas In Women in Their Place Jorunn Økland takes the archaeological remains at Corinth as a starting point from which to develop an interdisciplinary, theoretically informed reading of Paul's utterances on women in 1 Corinthians 11-14. In this section of the letter Paul deals with the ritual gatherings and describes the ekklesia as a of ritual space distinct from domestic space. Økland assesses the text within a larger context of four different gender models found in temple architecture, rituals and literary texts. Whilst Paul's teaching in the letter effectively engendered 'church' as male space, his use of a variety of gender models left early Christian women with many other notions of ritual space to explore. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 56
Página viii
... present work . There are , however , some people who are more indispensable than others in the final product . Without the hospitable environment offered me at the Norwegian Institute at Athens , many of the arguments of this book could ...
... present work . There are , however , some people who are more indispensable than others in the final product . Without the hospitable environment offered me at the Norwegian Institute at Athens , many of the arguments of this book could ...
Página 2
... present them as fully as possible within the limits of this book . Thus a body of ' texts ' related to Corinth is given relatively more space here . I have found gender - critical , ritual and space theories most helpful in reading the ...
... present them as fully as possible within the limits of this book . Thus a body of ' texts ' related to Corinth is given relatively more space here . I have found gender - critical , ritual and space theories most helpful in reading the ...
Página 4
... present four ancient models of gender in order to understand Paul's very different utterances on woman's place in ritual space . I argue against the use of gender - neutral language in representations of the human ideals of earliest ...
... present four ancient models of gender in order to understand Paul's very different utterances on woman's place in ritual space . I argue against the use of gender - neutral language in representations of the human ideals of earliest ...
Página 6
... present in past time and is present in modern history writing . The problem is not that gender is absent from either the past or from our renderings of history : even a womanless history is simultaneously and necessarily gendered . The ...
... present in past time and is present in modern history writing . The problem is not that gender is absent from either the past or from our renderings of history : even a womanless history is simultaneously and necessarily gendered . The ...
Página 13
... present in the language of the text itself and in the author's way of employing it . Wire thinks that the more determined the speaker is to persuade , the less he can afford to misjudge or misrepresent the audience ( Wire 1990 : 4 ) ...
... present in the language of the text itself and in the author's way of employing it . Wire thinks that the more determined the speaker is to persuade , the less he can afford to misjudge or misrepresent the audience ( Wire 1990 : 4 ) ...
Contenido
1 | |
6 | |
39 | |
Chapter 4 PLACES FOR WOMEN IN EARLY ROMAN CORINTHS RITUAL AND SANCTUARY SPACES | 78 |
PAUL AND THE DISCOURSE OF SANCTUARY SPACE | 131 |
Chapter 6 CORINTHIAN ORDER | 168 |
OBEDIENT AND SUBVERSIVE | 224 |
Appendix 1 | 247 |
Appendix 2 | 252 |
Appendix 3 | 258 |
BIBLIOGRAPHY | 266 |
INDEXES | 318 |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Women in Their Place: Paul and the Corinthian Discourse of Gender and ... Jorunn Økland Vista previa limitada - 2005 |
Women in Their Place: Paul and the Corinthian Discourse of Gender and ... Jorunn Økland Vista previa limitada - 2005 |
Women in Their Place: Paul and the Corinthian Discourse of Gender and ... Jorunn Økland Vista de fragmentos - 2004 |
Términos y frases comunes
Acrocorinth ancient Aphrodite argument Asclepius Athenaeus Athens Bookidis and Stroud Boyarin broader discourse Brooten building century Chapter context Corinthian discourse Corinthians 11 Corinthians 11-14 cosmic cosmological creation cultic culture curse tablets deities Demeter Dionysos discourse of gender discourse of sanctuary discussion early Christian early Roman Corinth ekklesia space feminine feminist gender and sanctuary goddess Graeco-Roman Greek hierarchy holy household imperial cult inscription Isis Jerusalem sanctuary Jewish Jewish discourse Jews Josephus Judaism Loeb Classical Library male and female male space masculine meal meaning mentioned myth notions Pandora particular passage Paul Pauline Pausanias phallogocentric Philo possible presupposes priestesses Proserpina public space Qumran relation religion representation represented ritual gatherings ritual space ritually constructed Roman period Rome sanctuary space Sarapis School of Classical Schüssler Fiorenza sexual social spatial status structure Studies at Athens synagogue temenos temple term Testament vaós veil woman women worship