Chastity as a topic is an ideal interdisciplinary consideration since it accesses iconographical representation, the philosophical issues of purity, morality, and of innocence; the legal issues of loss and punishment, the historical issues of celibacy, and the legislation that topic evoked; as well as the role of chastity as a literary topos in Late Antiquity as well as the Middle Ages, for example, in medieval commentary traditions and within medieval vernacular literatures. The topic of Chastity, as well as its opposing characteristics, thus provides an arena for a discussion of the transmission of Ovid and the commentaries this author provoked in the Middle Ages, the interpretation of images illustrating legal texts, cross-cultural enquiries, such as the reciprocity between Christian, Muslim, and Judaic interpretations of temperance, continence, and abstinence, and the theological-legal issue of “God’s rights” (in excising Adam and Eve from the Garden of Eden). Contributors: Nancy van Deusen; Frank T. Coulson; Marcia L. Colish; Uta-Renate Blumenthal; Thérèse-Anne Druart; Claudia Bornholdt; Susan L’Engle; Cristian Gaspar; and Rafael Chodos.
Chastity
A Study in Perception, Ideals, Opposition
Edited by Nancy Van Deusen
Biographical note
Nancy Van Deusen Ph.D. (l972) in Musicology, Indiana University, Bloomington, is Professor of Musicology, Benezet Professor of the Humanities, Claremont Graduate University, and is Director of the Claremont Consortium in Medieval and Early Modern Studies, Claremont Colleges and Graduate University, Claremont, California, USA. She has published extensively on music within the medieval city of Rome, music within medieval cathedrals, the medieval sequence within its Latin codicological and paleographical contexts as well as its significance for the history of ideas; music as medieval science and within the curriculum of the early university.
Readership
All those interested in intellectual history, the history of Late Antiquity, medieval history, and the history of the Church, as well as classical philologists and theologians.
Table of contents
Nancy van Deusen: Introduction
1. Frank T. Coulson: Failed Chastity and Ovid: Myrrha in the Latin Commentary Tradition from Antiquity to the Renaissance
2. Marcia L. Colish: Ambrose of Milan on Chastity
3. Uta-Renate Blumenthal: The Prohibition of Clerical Marriage in the Eleventh Century
4. Thérèse-Anne Druart: An Arab Christian Philosophical Defense of Religious Celebacy against its Islamic Condemnation: Yahyā ibn 'Adī
5. Susan L’Engle: Depictions of Chastity: Virtue Made Visible
6. Claudia Bornholdt: What Makes a Marriage: Consent or Consummation in Twelfth-Century German Literature
7. Cristian Gaspar: “The Spirit of Fornication, Whom the Children of the Hellenes Used to Call Eros:” Problematizations of Male Homoeroticism in Late Antique Monastic Milieux
8. Rafael Chodos: The Cry of Eden
1. Frank T. Coulson: Failed Chastity and Ovid: Myrrha in the Latin Commentary Tradition from Antiquity to the Renaissance
2. Marcia L. Colish: Ambrose of Milan on Chastity
3. Uta-Renate Blumenthal: The Prohibition of Clerical Marriage in the Eleventh Century
4. Thérèse-Anne Druart: An Arab Christian Philosophical Defense of Religious Celebacy against its Islamic Condemnation: Yahyā ibn 'Adī
5. Susan L’Engle: Depictions of Chastity: Virtue Made Visible
6. Claudia Bornholdt: What Makes a Marriage: Consent or Consummation in Twelfth-Century German Literature
7. Cristian Gaspar: “The Spirit of Fornication, Whom the Children of the Hellenes Used to Call Eros:” Problematizations of Male Homoeroticism in Late Antique Monastic Milieux
8. Rafael Chodos: The Cry of Eden
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Edited by Nancy van Deusen and Leonard Michael Koff
Mobs are complex, often an enigma. The topic of Mobs presented here serves as a means to address not only an important historical as well as present consideration, but to provide multiple disciplinary methods and viewpoints, bringing the past into the present.
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Edited by Nancy Van Deusen
An essential historical topos, Dreams and Visions--the second in a series that projects past issues into the present--brings significant contributions from an interdisciplinary spectrum of standpoints in order to discover fresh insights. Perhaps this is the essence, in any case, of "Vision"--to ...
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