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(Ebook) The Visual Rhetoric of the Married Laity in Late Antiquity; Iconography, the Christianization of Marriage, and Alternatives to the Ascetic Ideal by Mark D. Ellison ISBN 9781003832294, 1003832296

  • SKU: EBN-56459840
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Instant download (eBook) The Visual Rhetoric of the Married Laity in Late Antiquity; Iconography, the Christianization of Marriage, and Alternatives to the Ascetic Ideal after payment.
Authors:Mark D. Ellison
Year:2024
Publisher:Routledge
File Size:51.88 MB
Format:pdf
ISBNS:9781003832294, 1003832296
Categories: Ebooks

Product desciption

(Ebook) The Visual Rhetoric of the Married Laity in Late Antiquity; Iconography, the Christianization of Marriage, and Alternatives to the Ascetic Ideal by Mark D. Ellison ISBN 9781003832294, 1003832296

This study examines third- and fourth-century portraits of married Christians and associated images, reading them as visual rhetoric in early Christian conversations about marriage and celibacy, and recovering lay perspectives underrepresented or missing in literary sources.Historians of early Christianity have grown increasingly aware that written sources display an enthusiasm for asceticism and sexual renunciation that was far from representative of the lives of most early Christians. Often called a “silent majority,” the married laity in fact left behind a significant body of work in the material record. Particularly in and around Rome, they commissioned and used such objects as sarcophagi, paintings, glass vessels, finger rings, luxury silver, other jewelry items, gems, and seals that bore their portraits and other iconographic forms of self-representation. This study is the first to undertake a sustained exploration of these material sources in the context of early Christian discourses and practices related to marriage, sexuality, and celibacy. Reading this visual evidence increases understanding of the population who created it, the religious commitments they asserted, and the comparatively moderate forms of piety they set forth as meritorious alternatives to the ascetic ideal. In their visual rhetoric, these artifacts and images comprise additional voices in Late Antique conversations about idealized ways of Christian life, and ultimately provide a fuller picture of the early Christian world. Plentifully illustrated with photographs and drawings, this volume provides readers access to primary material evidence. Such evidence, like textual sources, requires critical interpretation; this study sets forth a careful methodology for iconographic analysis and applies it to identify the potential intentions of patrons and artists and the perceptions of viewers. It compares iconography to literary sources and ritual practices as part of the interpretive process, c
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