bokomslag John Cassian and the Creation of Monastic Subjectivity
Filosofi & religion

John Cassian and the Creation of Monastic Subjectivity

Joshua Daniel Schachterle

Pocket

479:-

Funktionen begränsas av dina webbläsarinställningar (t.ex. privat läge).

Uppskattad leveranstid 2-6 arbetsdagar

Fri frakt för medlemmar vid köp för minst 249:-

Andra format:

  • 204 sidor
  • 2023
John Cassian (360-435 CE) started his monastic career in Bethlehem. He later traveled to the Egyptian desert, living there as a monk, meeting the venerated Desert Fathers, and learning from them for about fifteen years. Much later, he would go to the region of Gaul to help establish a monastery there by writing monastic manuals, the Institutes and the Conferences. These seminal writings represent the first known attempt to bring the idealized monastic traditions from Egypt, long understood to be the cradle of monasticism, to the West. In his Institutes, Cassian comments that a monk ought by all means to flee from women and bishops (Inst. 11.18). An odd comment from a monk, apparently casting bishops as adversaries rather than models for the Christian life. This book argues that Cassian, in both the Institutes and the Conferences, advocated for a separation between monastics and the institutional Church. In Cassians writings and the larger corpus of monastic writings from his era, monks never referred to early Church fathers such as Irenaeus or Tertullian as authorities; instead, they cited quotes and stories exclusively from earlier, venerated monks. In that sense, monastic discourse such as Cassians formed a closed discursive system, consciously excluding the hierarchical institutional Church. Furthermore, Cassian argues for a separate monastic authority based not on apostolic succession but on apostolic praxis, the notion that monastic practices such as prayer and asceticism can be traced back to the primitive church. This study of Cassians writings is supplemented with Michel Foucaults analysis of the creation of subjects to examine Cassians formation of a specifically Egyptian form of monastic subjectivity for his audience, the monks of Gaul. Foucaults concepts of disciplinary power and pastoral power are also employed to demonstrate the effect Cassians rhetoric would have upon his direct audience, as well as many other monks throughout history.
  • Författare: Joshua Daniel Schachterle
  • Format: Pocket/Paperback
  • ISBN: 9781800501492
  • Språk: Engelska
  • Antal sidor: 204
  • Utgivningsdatum: 2023-08-14
  • Förlag: Equinox Publishing Ltd