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Since David Hume, the interpretation of miracle stories has been
dominated in the West by the binary distinction of fact vs.
fiction. The form-critical method added another restriction to the
interpretation of miracles by neglecting the context of its
macrotexts. Last but not least the hermeneutics of demythologizing
was interested in the self-understanding of individuals and not in
political perspectives. The book revisits miracle stories with
regard to these dimensions: 1. It demands to connect the
interpretation of Miracle Stories to concepts of reality. 2. It
criticizes the restrictions of the form critical method. 3. It
emphasizes the political implications of Miracle Stories and their
interpretations. Even the latest research accepts this modern
opposition of fact and fiction as self-evident. This book will
examine critically these concepts of reality with interpretations
of miracles. The book will address how concepts of reality, always
complex, came to expression in stories of miraculous healings and
their reception in medicine, art, literature, theology and
philosophy, from classic antiquity to the Middle Ages. Only through
such bygone concepts, contemporary interpretations of ancient
healings can gain plausibility.
What are the relevant conceptualities and terminologies marking
political, cultural, cultic, or religious borders and border zones?
What terms represent "border" or "border zones" and what did they
signify in antiquity? In this volume, an international group of
archaeologists, classicists, historians, and biblical scholars
investigates various terms, performances, and qualities of borders,
and ideologies of boundaries in antiquity. Their primary focus is
on physical borders and border zones of political organizations as
well as of sanctuaries and houses, and on borderlines which can be
experienced in demarcations and their relevance for religious life.
The contributions also discuss instances where definitions of
external borders are renounced altogether and states are organized
from the center toward the outer margins, for example, with the
sub-divisions of a given territory remaining undefined. And they
look into trans-boundary social relationships, investigated on the
basis of archaeological finds and textual sources, and their
significance for the transfer of knowledge.
Since David Hume, the interpretation of miracle stories has been
dominated in the West by the binary distinction of fact vs.
fiction. The form-critical method added another restriction to the
interpretation of miracles by neglecting the context of its
macrotexts. Last but not least the hermeneutics of demythologizing
was interested in the self-understanding of individuals and not in
political perspectives.The book revisits miracle stories with
regard to these dimensions: 1. It demands to connect the
interpretation of Miracle Stories to concepts of reality. 2. It
criticizes the restrictions of the form critical method. 3. It
emphasizes the political implications of Miracle Stories and their
interpretations.Even the latest research accepts this modern
opposition of fact and fiction as self-evident. This book will
examine critically these concepts of reality with interpretations
of miracles. The book will address how concepts of reality, always
complex, came to expression in stories of miraculous healings and
their reception in medicine, art, literature, theology and
philosophy, from classic antiquity to the Middle Ages. Only through
such bygone concepts, contemporary interpretations of ancient
healings can gain plausibility.
How did the visual, the oral, and the written interrelate in
antiquity? The essays in this collection address the competing and
complementary roles of visual media, forms of memory, oral
performance, and literacy and popular culture in the ancient
Mediterranean world. Incorporating both customary and innovative
perspectives, the essays advance the frontiers of our understanding
of the nature of ancient texts as regards audibility and
performance, the vital importance of the visual in the
comprehension of texts, and basic concepts of communication,
particularly the need to account for disjunctive and non-reciprocal
social relations in communication. Thus the contributions show how
the investigation of the interface of the oral and written, across
the spectrum of seeing, hearing, and writing, generates new
concepts of media and mediation.
This volume is a first attempt to investigate the impact of urban
space on prayers and related religious thought and belief in
ancient religions from the first to the sixth century CE. Taking
its lead from the spatial turn in scholarship, methodologically it
is an attempt to replace the hitherto customary focus on the forms
and semantics of prayer with an urban-spatial model. This model
understands prayers as performances that are embedded and embodied
in urban space as well as texts producing and inspired by
imaginations of space. To allow for a broader comparison, this
volume covers prayers and spaces of various religions all over the
ancient Mediterranean, from Roman and North African polytheisms
through early Christianity to Byzantine Christianity and early
Islam.
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