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Narratives and Spaces: Morality and Desire in the Popular Culture Marketplace

Autor David E. Nye
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 30 apr 2000 – vârsta de la 22 ani

Early Christians used charges of adultery, incest, and lascivious behavior to demonize their opponents, police insiders, resist pagan rulers, and define what it meant to be a Christian. Christians frequently claimed that they, and they alone were sexually virtuous, comparing themselves to those marked as outsiders, especially non-believers and "heretics," who were said to be controlled by lust and unable to rein in their carnal desires. True or not, these charges allowed Christians to present themselves as different from and morally superior to those around them.
Through careful, innovative readings, Jennifer Knust explores the writings of Paul, Justin Martyr, Irenaeus of Lyons, and other early Christian authors who argued that Christ alone made self-mastery possible. Rejection of Christ led to both immoral sexual behavior and, ultimately, alienation and punishment from God. Knust considers how Christian writers participated in a long tradition of rhetorical invective, a rhetoric that was often employed to defend status and difference. Christians borrowed, deployed, and reconfigured classical rhetorical techniques, turning them against their rulers to undercut their moral and political authority. Knust also examines the use of accusations of licentiousness in conflicts between rival groups of Christians. Portraying rival sects as depraved allowed accusers to claim their own group as representative of "true Christianity."
Knust's book also reveals the ways in which sexual slurs and their use in early Christian writings reflected cultural and gendered assumptions about what constituted purity, morality, and truth. In doing so, "Abandoned to Lust" highlights the complex interrelationships between sex, gender, and sexuality within the classical, biblical, and early-Christian traditions.

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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780231111966
ISBN-10: 0231111967
Pagini: 224
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.46 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Columbia University Press

Notă biografică

David E. Nye is Professor of American History at Odense University, Denmark. He has been a visiting scholar at Harvard, MIT and the Netherlands Institute for Advanced Study. Author of nine books and editor of many others, he has received both the Dexter Prize and the Able Wolman Award, and has served as a consultant for programmes on both Danish and American television.

Cuprins

Introduction
Spaces
1. Constructing Nature: Niagara Falls and the Grand Canyon
2. Electrifying the American West: 1880-1940
3. Domestic Landscape: Wright Morris' The Home Place

Narratives
4. Four Narratives of New Deal Electrification
5. Energy Narratives
6. Space of the Past: E.L. Doctorow's World's Fair

Narratives in Space
7. Electrifying Expositions: 1880-1939
8. European Exhibits at the 1939 World's Fair
9. Don't Fly Me to the Moon: The Public and the Apollo Space Program
10. Postmodernism and the Computer