"A spectacle to the world": The performance of Christian virgins and monks in late antiquity

Item

Title
"A spectacle to the world": The performance of Christian virgins and monks in late antiquity
Identifier
d_2009_2013:fb9f8f2b1986:10568
identifier
10872
Creator
Conte, William,
Contributor
Pamela Sheingorn
Date
2010
Language
English
Publisher
City University of New York.
Subject
Theater | Religious history | Ancient history | asceticism | early Christianity | late antiquity | monasticism | virginity
Abstract
A commonplace in the history of western theatre is the antipathy of the Church towards the "theatrum," long evident in the writings of the Greek and Latin Fathers. In this dissertation I argue that although "theatre" was anathema to Orthodox Christianity, the idea of performance was embraced, albeit covertly, as a means by which late-ancient Christians could express a new kind of subjectivity, of which the first exemplum is Paul. Activated by their "Christian subjectivity," the Fathers of the early Church constructed Christian identity in terms of behaviors and habits that would make orthodoxy "visible," and thus performative. The practices of virginity and monastic asceticism represent the border of the performance of Christian identity as live, embodied praxis during this period. Based on my close reading from a performance-theoretical perspective of select early Christian apologetics, polemics, and vitae, the dissertation demonstrates that performance was essential to the formation, expansion, and "triumph" of orthodox Christianity in late antiquity.
Type
dissertation
Source
2009_2013.csv
degree
Ph.D.
Program
Theatre