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portada In the eye of the Animal: Zoological Imagination in Ancient Christianity (in English)
Type
Physical Book
Year
2018
Language
Inglés
Pages
280
Format
Hardcover
Dimensions
23.1 x 15.7 x 3.0 cm
Weight
0.64 kg.
ISBN13
9780812250350

In the eye of the Animal: Zoological Imagination in Ancient Christianity (in English)

Patricia Cox Miller (Author) · University of Pennsylvania Press · Hardcover

In the eye of the Animal: Zoological Imagination in Ancient Christianity (in English) - Miller, Patricia Cox

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Synopsis "In the eye of the Animal: Zoological Imagination in Ancient Christianity (in English)"

Early Christian theology posited a strict division between animals and humans. Nevertheless, animal figures abound in early Christian literature and art--from Augustine's renowned wonder at the agility of the mosquito on the wing, to vivid exegeses of the six days of creation detailed in Genesis--and when they appear, the distinctions between human and animal are often dissolved. How, asks Patricia Cox Miller, does one account for the stunning zoological imagination found in a wide variety of genres of ancient Christian texts? In the Eye of the Animal complicates the role of animals in early Christian thought by showing how textual and artistic images and interpretive procedures actually celebrated a continuum of human and animal life. Synthesizing early Christian studies, contemporary philosophy, animal studies, ethology, and modern poetry, Miller identifies two contradictory strands in early Christian thinking about animals. The dominant thread viewed the body and soul of the human being as dominical, or the crowning achievement of creation; animals, with their defective souls, related to humans only as reminders of the brutish physical form. However, the second strand relied upon the idea of a continuum of animal life, which enabled comparisons between animals and humans. This second tendency, explains Miller, arises particularly in early Christian literature in which ascetic identity, the body, and ethics intersect. She explores the tension between these modes by tracing the image of the animal in early Christian literature, from the ethical animal behavior on display in Basil of Caesarea's Hexaemeron and the anonymous Physiologus, to the role of animals in articulating erotic desire, and from the idyllic intimacy of monks and animals in literature of desert ascetism to early Christian art that envisions paradise through human-animal symbiosis.

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The book is written in English.
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