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Ancient Christians and the Power of Curses Laura Salah Nasrallah (Yale University, Connecticut)

Ancient Christians and the Power of Curses By Laura Salah Nasrallah (Yale University, Connecticut)

Ancient Christians and the Power of Curses by Laura Salah Nasrallah (Yale University, Connecticut)


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Summary

Ancient Christians lived in a world of 'magic.' They and others-particularly those of low status-used curses as ritual objects to seek justice from gods and other beings. These curses, and invective against them, reveal the complexity of ancient Mediterranean religions and their aesthetics: their use of materiality, poetics, song, and incantation.

Ancient Christians and the Power of Curses Summary

Ancient Christians and the Power of Curses: Magic, Aesthetics, and Justice by Laura Salah Nasrallah (Yale University, Connecticut)

Ancient Christians and their non-Christian contemporaries lived in a world of 'magic.' Sometimes, they used curses as ritual objects to seek justice from gods and other beings; sometimes, they argued against them. Curses, and the writings of those who polemicized against curses, reveal the complexity of ancient Mediterranean religions, in which materiality, poetics, song, incantation, and glossolalia were used as technologies of power. Laura Nasrallah's study reframes the field of religion, the study of the Roman imperial period, and the investigation of the New Testament and ancient Christianity. Her approach eschews disciplinary aesthetics that privilege the literature and archaeological remains of elites, and that defines curses as magical materials, separable from religious ritual. Moreover, Nasrallah's imaginative use of art and 'research creations' of contemporary Black painters, sculptors, and poets offer insights for understanding how ancient ritual materials embedded into art work intervene into the present moment and critique injustice.

About Laura Salah Nasrallah (Yale University, Connecticut)

Laura Salah Nasrallah, the Buckingham Professor of New Testament Criticism and Interpretation at Yale University, is author ofAn Ecstasy of Folly: Prophecy and Authority in Early Christianity(2003);Christian Responses to Roman Art and Architecture: The Second-Century Church Amid the Spaces of Empire(2010), andArchaeology and the Letters of Paul (2019).

Table of Contents

Introduction: Curses, Religion, Aesthetics; 1. Making justice: curses, Justin Martyr, and the nailing of documents; 2. Substance and story: a greengrocer and the drowned Pharaoh at Antioch; Interlude; 3. Tongues, breath, stutter: 1 Corinthians and a Corinthian curse; 4. Incantation: sound and song as curse, cure, and gospel; Conclusions.

Additional information

NGR9781009405737
9781009405737
100940573X
Ancient Christians and the Power of Curses: Magic, Aesthetics, and Justice by Laura Salah Nasrallah (Yale University, Connecticut)
New
Hardback
Cambridge University Press
2024-06-20
358
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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