超越肉体,再回到肉体:卡洛林神学中的异世界之旅构想

Traditio Pub Date : 2023-12-14 DOI:10.1017/tdo.2023.4
M. Leja
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引用次数: 0

摘要

这篇文章分析了九世纪拉丁文本中临时来世之旅的机制,这一时期通常与中世纪幻象流派的诞生有关。有时是濒死体验,有时是简单的梦境,通往另一个世界的旅程主要是为了告诫生者,但在跨越生与死的界限时,幻象者自身的灵魂和肉体经历了问题重重的分离。以往的学术研究主要将中世纪早期的幻象作为政治文本、作为对基督教炼狱信仰的贡献或作为但丁《神曲》等后来中世纪经典作品的先驱来分析,与此不同,本研究将幻象作为灵魂与肉体结合神学的窗口。第一部分概述了卡洛林王朝来世幻象之前的重要讨论(包括奥古斯丁关于灵魂的对话、著名的梅洛温王朝的《巴伦图斯幻象》以及各种关于异世界遭遇的岛国文本)。第二部分展示了加洛林王朝的异象作家如何打破常规,以保护灵魂在尘世躯体中的稳定性--这正是九世纪中叶关于灵魂的论文中日益紧迫的教义问题。这篇文章的一个重要论点是主张更多地关注加洛林王朝的幻想文学文本与神学小册子之间的联系,而这一点在强调幻想文学的想象性叙事与中世纪早期神学表面上的保守主义截然不同的领域中常常被忽视。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
BEYOND THE BODY AND BACK AGAIN: VISIONS OF OTHERWORLDLY JOURNEYS IN CAROLINGIAN THEOLOGY
This essay analyzes the mechanics of temporary journeys to the afterlife in Latin texts from the ninth century, the period typically associated with the birth of a medieval visionary genre. Sometimes framed as near-death experiences, sometimes as simple dreams, journeys to an otherworldly landscape were primarily intended as admonitions to the living, but in crossing the boundary between living and dead, the visionary's own soul and body experienced a problematic disjuncture. In contrast to previous scholarship, which has analyzed early medieval visions primarily as political texts, as contributions to a Christian belief in purgatory, or as forerunners to later medieval classics like Dante's Divine Comedy, this study uses visions as windows onto the theology of the soul-body union. The first part surveys important discussions that preceded and informed Carolingian visions of the afterlife (including Augustine's dialogues on the soul, the famous Merovingian Vision of Barontus, and various Insular texts with otherworldly encounters). The second part shows how, against these earlier models, Carolingian visionary authors broke with conventions in order to safeguard the stability of the soul's containment within its earthly body — the very same doctrinal issue that appears with mounting urgency in treatises on the soul produced in the middle decades of the ninth century. A key intervention of the essay is to argue for greater attention to the connections between Carolingian visionary texts and theological tracts, a point often overlooked in a field that has emphasized the imaginative narratives of visionary literature as fundamentally distinct from the ostensible conservativism of early medieval theology.
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