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Bibliografická citace

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EB
ONLINE
1st ed.
Berlin/Boston : Walter de Gruyter GmbH, 2020
1 online resource (606 pages)
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ISBN 9783110557596 (electronic bk.)
ISBN 9783110557572
Print version: Gasparini, Valentino Lived Religion in the Ancient Mediterranean World Berlin/Boston : Walter de Gruyter GmbH,c2020 ISBN 9783110557572
Intro -- Contents -- Pursuing lived ancient religion -- Section 1: Experiencing the religious -- Introduction to Section 1 -- (Re-)modelling religious experience: some experiments with hymnic form in the imperial period -- Looking at the Shepherd of Hermas through the experience of lived religion -- "They are not the words of a rational man": ecstatic prophecy in Montanism -- Kyrios and despotes: addresses to deities and religious experiences -- About servants and flagellants: Seneca’s Capitol description and the variety of ’ordinary’ religious experience at Rome -- The experience of pilgrimage in the Roman Empire: communitas, paideiā, and piety-signaling -- Experiencing curses: neurobehavioral traits of ritual and spatiality in the Roman Empire -- Ego-documents on religious experiences in Paul’s Letters: 2 Corinthians 12 and related texts -- Section 2: A "thing" called body: expressing religion bodily -- Introduction to Section 2 -- Hand in hand: rethinking anatomical votives as material things -- The "lived" body in pain: illness and initiation in Lucian’s Podagra and Aelius Aristides’ Hieroi Logoi -- Divinity refracted: extended agency and the cult of Symeon Stylites the Elder -- Food for the body, the body as food: Roman martyrs and the paradox of consumption -- Section 3: Lived places: from individual appropriation of space to locational group-styles -- Introduction to Section 3 -- Renewing the past: Rufinus’ appropriation of the sacred site of Panoias (Vila Real, Portugal) -- This god is your god, this god is my god: local identities at sacralized places in Roman Syria -- Come and dine with us: invitations to ritual dining as part of social strategies in sacred spaces in Palmyra -- Does religion matter? Life, death, and interaction in the Roman suburbium.
Section 4: Switching the code: meaning-making beyond established religious frameworks -- Introduction to Section 4 -- Symbolic mourning -- P.Oxy. 1.5 and the Codex Sangermanensis as "visionary living texts": visionary habitus and processes of "textualization" and/or "scripturalization" in Late Antiquity -- To convert or not to convert: the appropriation of Jewish rituals, customs and beliefs by non-Jews -- Emperor Julian, an appropriated word, and a different view of 4th-century "lived religion" -- The appropriation of the book of Jonah in 4th century Christianity by Theodore of Mopsuestia and Jerome of Stridon -- Weapons of the (Christian) weak: pedagogy of trickery in Early Christian texts -- Biographical Notes -- Index.
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Valentino Gasparini, Maik Patzelt, Rubina Raja, Anna-Katharina Rieger, Jörg Rüpke, Emiliano Rubens Urciuoli : Pursuing lived ancient religion 1 // Section 1: Experiencing the religious // Maik Patzelt : Introduction to Section 1 11 // Richard L. Gordon : (Re-)modelling religious experience: some experiments with hymnic form in the imperial period 23 // Angela Kim Harkins : Looking at the Shepherd of Hermas through the experience of lived religion 49 // Maria Dell’lsola : "They are not the words of a rational man": ecstatic prophecy in Montanism 71 // Nicole Belayche : Kyrios and despotes: addresses to deities and religious experiences 87 // Maik Patzelt : About servants and flagellants: Seneca’s Capitol description and the variety of "ordinary" religious experience at Rome 117 // Ian Rutherford : The experience of pilgrimage in the Roman Empire: communitas, paideia, and piety-signaling 137 // Irene Salvo : Experiencing curses: neurobehavioral traits of ritual and spatiality in the Roman Empire 157 // Oda Wischmeyer : Ego-documents on religious experiences in Paul’s Letters: 2 Corinthians 12 and related texts--181 // Section 2: A "thing" called body: expressing religion bodily // Anna-Katharina Rieger : Introduction to Section 2 201 // Emma-Jayne Graham : Hand in hand: rethinking anatomical votives as material things 209 // Georgia Petridou : The "lived" body in pain: illness and initiation in Lucian’s Podagra and Aelius Aristides’ Hieroi Logoi 237 // Heather Hunter-Crawley : Divinity refracted: extended agency and the cult of Symeon Stylites the Elder 261 // Nicola Denzey Lewis : Food for the body, the body as food: Roman martyrs and the paradox of consumption 287 // Section 3: Lived places: from individual appropriation of space to locational group-styles // Valentino Gasparini : Introduction to Section 3 309 //
Valentino Gasparini : Renewing the past: Rufinus’ appropriation of the sacred site of Pandias (Vila Real, Portugal) 319 // Anna-Katharina Rieger : This god is your god, this god is my god: local identities at sacralized places in Roman Syria 351 // Rubina Raja : Come and dine with us: invitations to ritual dining as part of social strategies in sacred spaces in Palmyra 385 // Barbara E. Borg : Does religion matter? Life, death, and interaction in the Roman suburbium 405 // Section 4: Switching the code: meaning-making beyond established religious frameworks // Emiliano Rubens Urciuoli : Introduction to Section 4 437 // Christopher Degelmann : Symbolic mourning: the literary appropriation of signs in Late Republican and Early Imperial Rome 447 // Luca Arcari : P.Oxy. 1.5 and the Codex Sangermanensis as "visionary living texts": visionary habitus and processes of "textualization" and/or "scripturalization" in Late Antiquity 469 // Katell Berthelot : To convert or not to convert: the appropriation of Jewish rituals, customs and beliefs by non-Jews 493 // Douglas Boin : Emperor Julian, an appropriated word, and a different view of 4th-century "lived religion" 517 // Katharina Bracht : The appropriation of the book of Jonah in 4th century Christianity by Theodore of Mopsuestia and Jerome of Stridon 531 // Emiliano Rubens Urciuoli : Weapons of the (Christian) weak: pedagogy of trickery in Early Christian texts--553 // Biographical Notes 581 // Index 587
(Au-PeEL)EBL5525610
(MiAaPQ)EBC5525610
(OCoLC)1153487527

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