Fr. 100.00

Daughters of Hecate

English · Paperback / Softback

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Zusatztext This impressive collection challenges the seemingly common-sense association between women and magic. Drawing on literary and material evidence from across the ancient Mediterranean world, it powerfully demonstrates that the gendering of magic is neither natural nor universal, but is conditioned by the dynamics of local conflict and given form by historically specific taxonomies of knowledge. Informationen zum Autor Kimberly B. Stratton is an associate professor in the College of Humanities at Carleton University. She holds a B.A. in English and Religion from Barnard College, an M.T.S. from Harvard University, and a Ph.D. in the history of religions in late antiquity from Columbia University. She has also studied at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Her research covers the fields of early Christianity, rabbinic Judaism, and Greco-Roman religion, focusing on the dynamics of identity formation, discourse, and social construction at the intersection of those ancient cultures.Dayna S. Kalleres is an associate professor in the Program for the Study of Religion and the Department of Literature at the University of California, San Diego. She did her Ph.D. in program for the History of Early Christianity at Brown University; prior to that, she received a B.A. in Comparative Literature and Classics at Indiana University. Her research covers the fields of Greco-Roman Religions and Early to late antiqueChristianities; her focal interests include magic and religion, ritual studies, demonology and the urban sphere. Klappentext Daughters of Hecate presents a diverse collection of essays on the topic of women and magic in the ancient Mediterranean world. The book gathers investigations by leading scholars from the fields of Classics, Judaic Studies, and early Christianity, illuminating as well as interrogating the persistent associations of women with magic. Zusammenfassung Daughters of Hecate presents a diverse collection of essays on the topic of women and magic in the ancient Mediterranean world. The book gathers investigations by leading scholars from the fields of Classics, Judaic Studies, and early Christianity, illuminating as well as interrogating the persistent associations of women with magic. Inhaltsverzeichnis Preface 1. Interrogating the Magic-Gender Connection - Kimberly B. Stratton Part I. Fiction and Fantasy: Gendering Magic in Literature 2. From Goddess to Hag: The Greek and the Roman Witch in Classical Literature - Barbette Stanley Spaeth 3. "The Most Worthy of Women is a Mistress of Magic": Women as Witches and Ritual Practitioners in 1 Enoch and Rabbinic Sources - Rebecca Lesses 4. Gendering Heavenly Secrets? Women, Angels, and the Problem of Misogyny and "Magic" - Annette Yoshiko Reed 5. Magic, Abjection, and Gender in Roman Literature - Kimberly B. Stratton Part II. Gender and Magic Discourse in Practice 6. Magic Accusations Against Women in Tacitus's Annals - Elizabeth Ann Pollard 7. Drunken Hags with Amulets and Prostitutes with Erotic Spells: The Re-Feminization of Magic in Late Antique Christian Homilies - Dayna S. Kalleres 8. The Bishop, the Pope, and the Prophetess: Rival Ritual Experts in Third-Century Cappadocia - Ayse Tuzlak 9. Living Images of the Divine: Female Theurgists in Late Antiquity - Nicola Denzey Lewis 10. Sorceresses and Sorcerers in Early Christian Tours of Hell - Kirsti Barrett Copeland Part III. Gender, Magic, and the Material Record 11. The Social Context of Women's Erotic Magic in Antiquity - David Frankfurter 12. Cheating Women: Curse Tablets and Roman Wives - Pauline Ripat 13. Saffron, Spices, and Sorceresses: Magic Bowls and the Bavli - Yaakov Elman 14. Victimology or: How to Deal With Untimely Death - Fritz Graf 15. A Gospel Amulet for Joannia (P.Oxy. VIII 1151) - AnneMarie Luijendijk ...

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