1st Edition

The Suffering Self Pain and Narrative Representation in the Early Christian Era

By Judith Perkins Copyright 1995
    264 Pages
    by Routledge

    264 Pages
    by Routledge

    The Suffering Self is a ground-breaking, interdisciplinary study of the spread of Christianity across the Roman empire. Judith Perkins shows how Christian narrative representation in the early empire worked to create a new kind of human self-understanding - the perception of the self as sufferer. Drawing on feminist and social theory, she addresses the question of why forms of suffering like martyrdom and self-mutilation were so important to early Christians.
    This study crosses the boundaries between ancient history and the study of early Christianity, seeing Christian representation in the context of the Greco-Roman world. She draws parallels with suffering heroines in Greek novels and in martyr acts and examines representations in medical and philosophical texts.
    Judith Perkins' controversial study is important reading for all those interested in ancient society, or in the history `f Christianity.

    Introduction; Chapter 1 Death as a Happy Ending; Chapter 2 Marriages as Happy Endings; Chapter 3 Pain Without Effect; Chapter 4 Suffering and Power; Chapter 5 Healing and Power; Chapter 6 The Sick Self; Chapter 7 Ideology, Not Pathology; Chapter 8 Saints’ Lives;

    Biography

    Judith Perkins is Professor of Classics and Humanities at Saint Joseph College, West Hartford, Connecticut.

    `Judith Perkins, is a classical scholar with a wide and imaginatve sympathy for the emotional and spiritual dilemmas of the ancient world in which Christianity was born.' - Church Times