A Militant Bride: Gender-Loaded Metaphors in Jerome’s Writings to Ascetic Men and Women

IF 0.3 0 RELIGION
Katarina Pålsson
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

This article examines Jerome’s use of bridal and military imagery in his writings to male and female ascetics. The metaphor of the “bride” and the “soldier” had been used in earlier Christianity to describe the Christian identity of the baptized person, and in the writings of Jerome and other fourth-century ascetic writers, these motifs came to be increasingly employed in discourses on the ascetic life. While previous scholarship has claimed that Jerome mainly used the image of the bride in descriptions of and advise to ascetic women, and military imagery in writings to and about men, the article argues that his employment of these imageries was more complex. It is shown that while the bridal metaphor signals femininity and passivity, and the soldier metaphor manliness and activity, Jerome’s employment of them does not depend first and foremost on the gender of the ascetic. Rather, both images are used to support certain aspects of his theology – mainly his ideas about the postlapsarian, fleshly condition and the human possibility of transcendence – as well as his ascetic ideology, by marking the ascetics as superior to non-ascetics through their unique relationship with Christ.
好战的新娘:杰罗姆写给禁欲主义男女的作品中的性别隐喻
本文探讨了杰罗姆在其写给男女苦行僧的作品中对新娘和军人意象的使用。在早期基督教中,"新娘 "和 "士兵 "的隐喻被用来描述受洗者的基督徒身份,而在杰罗姆和其他四世纪苦行僧作家的著作中,这些主题被越来越多地运用到有关苦行生活的论述中。以往的学术研究认为,杰罗姆主要在对苦行妇女的描述和劝告中使用新娘的形象,而在对男性的著作和关于男性的著作中使用军事的意象,但本文认为他对这些意象的使用更为复杂。文章指出,虽然新娘隐喻意味着女性和被动性,士兵隐喻意味着男性和活动性,但杰罗姆对这些隐喻的使用并不首先取决于苦行者的性别。相反,这两个隐喻都被用来支持他神学的某些方面--主要是他关于后世、肉体状况和人类超越可能性的观点--以及他的苦行思想,通过苦行者与基督的独特关系,将苦行者标记为优于非苦行者。
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来源期刊
Open Theology
Open Theology RELIGION-
CiteScore
1.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
23
审稿时长
15 weeks
期刊介绍: Open Theology is an international Open Access, peer-reviewed academic journal that welcomes contributions written in English addressing religion in its various forms and aspects: historical, theological, sociological, psychological, and other. The journal encompasses all major disciplines of Theology and Religious Studies, presenting doctrine, history, organization and everyday life of various types of religious groups and the relations between them. We publish articles from the field of Theology as well as Philosophy, Sociology and Psychology of Religion and also dialogue between Religion and Science. The Open Theology does not present views of any particular theological school nor of a particular religious organization. The contributions are written by researchers who represent different religious views. The authors present their research concerning the old religious traditions as well as new religious movements. The aim of the journal is to promote an international and interdisciplinary dialogue in the field of Theology and Religious Studies. The journal seeks also to provide researchers, pastors and other interested persons with the fruits of academic studies.
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