Introduction
In: Journal of religion and violence, Band 1, Heft 1, S. 3-6
ISSN: 2159-6808
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In: Journal of religion and violence, Band 1, Heft 1, S. 3-6
ISSN: 2159-6808
In: Information services & use 28.2008,2
In: Special issue
In: Information services & use 27.2007,4
In: Special issue
In: Journal of religion and violence, Band 5, Heft 2, S. 222-225
ISSN: 2159-6808
In: Journal of religion and violence, Band 5, Heft 1, S. 107-110
ISSN: 2159-6808
In: Journal of religion and violence, Band 5, Heft 2, S. 123-129
ISSN: 2159-6808
In: Journal of religion and violence, Band 5, Heft 3, S. 274-290
ISSN: 2159-6808
This paper explores the ways communities reexperience traumatic events. Previous studies have made important contributions by observing that communities, in contrast to individuals, often use a traumatic event to construct their identity; and trauma is not always painful but sometimes desired. To further investigate these dimensions of traumatization, I focus on the performance of mātam or self-flagellation, which is practiced by a small minority of the world's Shīʿī Muslim population on the Day of ʿĀshūrāʾ. For many Shīʿa, particularly Twelvers, Ḥusayn b. ʿAlī's death at the battle of Karbala in 680 C.E. is a collectively traumatic event. Not only does Karbala embody a collective tragedy for Shīʿī Muslims, it defines and shapes their interpretation of history. During the practice of mātam, the mourner enacts the trauma of Karbala on one's body, thus reliving and preserving the collective trauma.
In: Journal of religion and violence, Band 5, Heft 2, S. 208-210
ISSN: 2159-6808
In: Journal of religion and violence, Band 5, Heft 1, S. 27-48
ISSN: 2159-6808
In: Journal of religion and violence, Band 5, Heft 1, S. 79-101
ISSN: 2159-6808
In: Journal of religion and violence, Band 5, Heft 1, S. 103-106
ISSN: 2159-6808
In: Journal of religion and violence, Band 5, Heft 3, S. 253-273
ISSN: 2159-6808
In conversation with recent scholarship on Roman physiognomy, dress, and imperial prose fictions, this article traces the way in which ancient Christian martyr texts participate in broader Roman discourses of appearance and status in their construction of the Christian and the non-believing, apostate, or blaspheming other. After introducing the nexus between appearance, status, and identity in Roman society and culture more generally, this article considers the way in which these physiognomic and sartorial conventions function in two imperial prose fictions—Longus's Daphnis and Chloe and Apuleius's Metamorphoses—before turning to a similar consideration of two Christian martyr texts, namely, the Passion of Perpetua and Felicity and the Letter of the Churches of Vienne and Lyons. The article contends that the martyr texts, like the imperial fictions, construct the other, in part by appealing to long-standing Roman physiognomic and sartorial expectations. The non-believers, apostates, and blasphemers are visibly conspicuous for their non-elite deportment and slave-like physical features—features which, in a Roman context, mark their bodies as legitimate objects of violence. The Christians, in contrast, showcase a posture befitting the elite (those safeguarded from licit violence), not that of slaves or low-status damnati/noxii (those condemned to violent death in the Roman arena). In so doing, these martyr texts literarily reimagine Roman social strategies of violent humiliation as celebrations of honorable Christian identity, while they simultaneously deploy characteristically Roman discursive strategies to construct a humiliated, blaspheming other.
In: Journal of religion and violence, Band 5, Heft 1, S. 1-3
ISSN: 2159-6808
In: Journal of religion and violence, Band 5, Heft 1, S. 111-115
ISSN: 2159-6808
In: Journal of religion and violence, Band 5, Heft 2, S. 205-207
ISSN: 2159-6808