𝔖 Bobbio Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

Cover of Subversive virtue: asceticism and authority in the second-century pagan world

Subversive virtue: asceticism and authority in the second-century pagan world

✍ Scribed by Francis, James A.


Publisher
Pennsylvania State University Press
Year
1995
Tongue
English
Weight
234 KB
Edition
1st
Category
Fiction
ISBN-13
9780271013046

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


Much Attention Has Been Devoted In Recent Years To Christian Asceticism In Late Antiquity. But Christianity Did Not Introduce Asceticism To The Ancient World. An Underlying Theme Of This Fascinating Study Of Pagan Asceticism Is That Much Of The Work On Christian Holy Men Has Ignored Earlier Manifestations Of Asceticism In Antiquity And The Way Roman Society Confronted It. Accordingly, James Francis Looks To The Second Century, The Balmy Late Afternoon Of Rome's Classical Empire, When The Conflict Between Asceticism And Authority Reached A Turning Point. Francis Begins With The Emperor Marcus Aurelius (121-180), Who Warned In His Meditations Against Display(ing) Oneself As A Man Keen To Impress Others With A Reputation For Asceticism Or Beneficence. The Stoic Aurelius Saw Ascetic Self-discipline As A Virtue, But One To Be Exercised In Moderation. Like Other Roman Aristocrats Of His Day, He Perceived Practitioners Of Ostentatious Physical Asceticism As A Threat To Prevailing Norms And The Established Order. Prophecy, Sorcery, Miracle Working, Charismatic Leadership, Expressions Of Social Discontent, And Advocacy Of Alternative Values Regarding Wealth, Property, Marriage, And Sexuality Were The Issues Provoking The Controversy. If Aurelius Defined The Acceptable Limits Of Ascetical Practice, Then The Poet Lucian Depicted The Threat Ascetics Were Perceived To Pose To The Social Status Quo Through His Biting Satire. In An Eye-opening Analysis Of Philostratus's Life Of Apollonius Of Tyana, Francis Shows How Roman Society Reined In Its Deviant Ascetics By Rehabilitating Them Into Pillars Of Traditional Values. Celsus's True Doctrine Shows How The Views Pagans Held Of Their Own Ascetics Influenced Their Negative View Of Christianity.. Finally, Francis Points Out Striking Parallels Between The Conflict Over Pagan Asceticism And Its Christian Counterpart. By Treating Pagan Asceticism Seriously In Its Own Right, Francis Establishes The Context Necessary For Understanding The Great Flowering Of Asceticism In Late Antiquity.--book Jacket. Stoicism: Setting The Norm -- Marcus Aurelius: Rational Ascetism And Social Conservatism -- Lucian: Ascetics As Enemies Of Culture -- Apollonius Of Tyana: The Rehabilitated Ascetic -- Celsus: Christians, Ascetics, And Rebels -- Ascetics And Holy Men: Conflict, Change, And Continuity. James A. Francis. Includes Bibliographical References (p. [191]-212) And Index.