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E-Book

E-Book, Englisch, Band 1, 407 Seiten, Gewicht: 10 g

Reihe: Ekstasis: Religious Experience from Antiquity to the Middle Ages

Seim / Økland Metamorphoses

Resurrection, Body and Transformative Practices in Early Christianity

E-Book, Englisch, Band 1, 407 Seiten, Gewicht: 10 g

Reihe: Ekstasis: Religious Experience from Antiquity to the Middle Ages

ISBN: 978-3-11-020299-1
Verlag: De Gruyter
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: Adobe DRM (»Systemvoraussetzungen)



How were ideas and experiences of transformation expressed in early Christianity and early Judaism? This volume explores the social and philosophical frameworks within which transformative ideas such as resurrection and practices of becoming “a new being” were shaped. It also explores the analogies and parameters by which transformation was being observed, noted and asserted. The focus on transformation helps to connect topics that tend to be studied separately, such as cosmology, resurrection, aging, gender, and conversion. The textual material is wide-ranging and there are new readings of core passages. - Ideas and experiences of transformations in early Christianity and early Judaism - Connects topics that tend to be studied seperately (cosmology, resurrection, aging, gender, conversion) - With wide-ranging textual material
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Weitere Infos & Material


1;Frontmatter;1
2;Contents;5
3;Introduction;7
4;The Resurrected Body in Luke-Acts: The Significance of Space;25
5;Ancient Notions of Transferal and Apotheosis in Relation to the Empty Tomb Story in Mark;47
6;“In your midst as a child” – “In the form of an old man” Images of Aging and Immortality in Ancient Christianity;65
7;Genealogies of the Self: Materiality, Personal Identity, and the Body in Paul’s Letters to the Corinthians;89
8;“With What Kind of Body Will They Come?” Metamorphosis and the Concept of Change: From Platonic Thinking to Paul´s Notion of the Resurrection of the Dead;115
9;Complete and Incomplete Transformation in Paul – a Philosophical Reading of Paul on Body and Spirit;129
10;“Flesh and Blood Cannot Inherit the Kingdom of God:” The Transformation of the Flesh in the Early Christian Debates Concerning Resurrection;153
11;Valentinian Ideas About Salvation as Transformation;175
12;“These are the Symbols and Likenesses of the Resurrection”: Conceptualizations of Death and Transformation in the Treatise on the Resurrection (NHC I,4);193
13;Metamorphosis and Mind Cognitive Explorations of the Grotesque in Early Christian Literature;213
14;Male Women Martyrs: The Function of Gender-Transformation Language in Early Christian Martyrdom Accounts;237
15;Imagining Human Transformation in the Context of Invisible Powers: Instrumental Agency in Second-Century Treatments of Conversion;255
16;“As Already Translated to the Kingdom While Still in the Body” The Transformation of the Ascetic in Early Egyptian Monasticism;277
17;The Angelic Life;297
18;Recognizing the Righteous Remnant? Resurrection, Recognition and Eschatological Reversals in 2 Baruch 47-52;317


Turid Karlsen Seim, Norwegian Institute in Rome, University of Oslo, Norway; Jorunn Økland, University of Oslo, Norway, and University of Sheffield, UK.


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