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oapen-20.500.12657-591822022-11-09T03:33:11Z Chapter Introduction Fruchtman, Diane Antiquity; Living; Martyrdom; Martyrs; Surviving bic Book Industry Communication::H Humanities::HB History::HBL History: earliest times to present day::HBLA Ancient history: to c 500 CE This chapter outlines the historical and historiographical inaccuracy of privileging definitions of martyrdom that center on death, and situates this argument within the current scholarly conversation. It establishes both the academic consensus that “real” martyrdom requires death and the record of living martyrs in Christian history that proves that consensus wrong: indeed, living martyrs persist as real objects of spiritual devotion and emulation across the span of Christian history, not just in late antiquity. I introduce the main players in the book (Prudentius [c. 348-413], Paulinus of Nola [353-431], and Augustine [354-430]), summarize the subsequent chapters, explicate my methodology (close readings informed by literary-historical context; a heuristic of tripartite witness; multiple means of assessing potential reception), and discuss various objections—including the existence of the category of confessors and the habits of mind and scholarship that have resulted in our failure to recognize living martyrs as martyrs, plain and simple. 2022-11-08T12:23:02Z 2022-11-08T12:23:02Z 2023 chapter 9781032261065 9781032263250 https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/59182 eng application/pdf Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International 9781003287728_10.4324_b22865-1.pdf Taylor & Francis Living Martyrs in Late Antiquity and Beyond Routledge 10.4324/b22865-1 10.4324/b22865-1 7b3c7b10-5b1e-40b3-860e-c6dd5197f0bb 0d5ffb16-fd9f-4a45-9c0a-0de48baff72a 9781032261065 9781032263250 Routledge 23 open access
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English
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This chapter outlines the historical and historiographical inaccuracy of privileging definitions of martyrdom that center on death, and situates this argument within the current scholarly conversation. It establishes both the academic consensus that “real” martyrdom requires death and the record of living martyrs in Christian history that proves that consensus wrong: indeed, living martyrs persist as real objects of spiritual devotion and emulation across the span of Christian history, not just in late antiquity. I introduce the main players in the book (Prudentius [c. 348-413], Paulinus of Nola [353-431], and Augustine [354-430]), summarize the subsequent chapters, explicate my methodology (close readings informed by literary-historical context; a heuristic of tripartite witness; multiple means of assessing potential reception), and discuss various objections—including the existence of the category of confessors and the habits of mind and scholarship that have resulted in our failure to recognize living martyrs as martyrs, plain and simple.
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9781003287728_10.4324_b22865-1.pdf
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9781003287728_10.4324_b22865-1.pdf
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9781003287728_10.4324_b22865-1.pdf
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title_full |
9781003287728_10.4324_b22865-1.pdf
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9781003287728_10.4324_b22865-1.pdf
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9781003287728_10.4324_b22865-1.pdf
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9781003287728_10.4324_b22865-1.pdf
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Taylor & Francis
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2022
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1771297575365771264
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