割耳的政治学:在福音受难叙事中剪除被奴役者的耳朵

IF 0.5 2区 哲学 0 RELIGION
Isaac T. Soon
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引用次数: 0

摘要

这篇文章对奴隶主在正典福音书中对待大祭司的奴隶代理人的观点提出了质疑。文章试图证明,古代剪耳和面部残割的传统和习俗,尤其是对被奴役者的剪耳和面部残割,是如何让人了解福音书中被奴役者所受待遇的意义的。被残害的受奴役者绝不仅仅是一个情节设置,而是一个政治知识的场所,它同时对我们理解受奴役者本人、残害门徒和耶稣产生了影响。虽然绝大多数解释这段经文的人都认为马勒古耳朵被残害并不重要,但仔细分析耳朵被残害、肢解和剪除的语境,可以为我们重读每本福音书中的这段情节提供一个有用的框架。在分析了从古代西南亚到二世纪文学作品中的割耳情节后,我从叙事批判的角度重新解读了这一情节的各个版本。根据古代关于割耳和肢解的记载,我发现福音书中肢解门徒的行为并不英勇,被奴役的人不保留任何能动性,耶稣在门徒对抗大祭司代理人的行为中是同谋。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Politics of Ear Mutilation: Cropping an Enslaved Person in the Gospel Passion Narratives
This article challenges a slaveholder perspective of the treatment of the high priest’s enslaved agent in the canonical gospels. It seeks to demonstrate how ancient traditions and practices of ear cropping and facial mutilation, especially of enslaved folks, give insight into the significance of the enslaved agent’s treatment in the gospels. Far from being a mere plot device, the enslaved person who is maimed is a site of political knowledge that has simultaneous implications for our understanding of the enslaved agent themselves, the mutilating disciple, and Jesus. While the vast majority of interpreters of the passage view the maiming of Malchus’s ear as unimportant, a close analysis of contexts where ears are mutilated, maimed, and cropped provides a useful framework for rereading the episode in each of the gospels. After analyzing the contexts of ear cropping, from ancient Southwest Asia to second-century literature, I re-read each version of the episode from a narrative-critical point of view. In light of ancient accounts of cropping and mutilation, I find that the mutilating disciple’s behavior in the gospels was not heroic, that the enslaved person retains no agency, and that Jesus is complicit in the disciple’s actions against the high-priest’s agent.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
48
期刊介绍: The Journal for the Study of the New Testament is one of the leading academic journals in New Testament Studies. It is published five times a year and aims to present cutting-edge work for a readership of scholars, teachers in the field of New Testament, postgraduate students and advanced undergraduates. All the many and diverse aspects of New Testament study are represented and promoted by the journal, including innovative work from historical perspectives, studies using social-scientific and literary theory or developing theological, cultural and contextual approaches.
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