Women Healing/healing Women

Women Healing/healing Women The Genderization of Healing in Early Christianity - BibleWorld

Hardback (15 Jan 2006)

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Publisher's Synopsis

The impetus for this book was the startling realization that within early Christianity, which is characterized by healing, no women are explicitly commissioned to heal. The work begins with a search for the women who were healers in the Graeco-Roman world of the late Hellenistic and early Roman period, finding them honoured in inscriptions, named by medical writers, and stereotyped by playwrights and other literateurs. What emerges by the first century of the Common Era, is a world in which women functioned as healers as well as healed and that healing was a site of contestation in relation to gender. The interpretive lens brought to bear on the wide range of sources used in this study is a multi-dimensional one informed by feminism, post-colonialism and ecological studies. The methodology is socio-rhetorical drawing on tools from medical anthropology. The turning of the multi-dimensional lens and these tools on the gospels, informed by the context constructed in the first part of the study, enables new interpretations of the stories of women healing to emerge. A woman pours out healing ointment; healed women bear on their bodies the language describing Jesus and the stereotyped demon-possessed women of the Lukan gospel may, indeed, be healers.

Book information

ISBN: 9781845531348
Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
Imprint: Equinox Publishing
Pub date:
DEWEY: 261.56108209015
DEWEY edition: 22
Number of pages: 262
Weight: 544g
Height: 234mm
Width: 156mm
Spine width: 21mm