Power in the Name - (Ekstasis: Religious Experience from Antiquity to the Middle) by Joseph L Kimmel (Hardcover)
About this item
Highlights
- How do divine names channel power?
- About the Author: Joseph L. Kimmel, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, USA.
- 235 Pages
- Religion + Beliefs, Antiquities & Archaeology
- Series Name: Ekstasis: Religious Experience from Antiquity to the Middle
Description
About the Book
How do divine names channel power? This comparative study of powerful names analyzes onomastic invocations from two distinct contexts, the ancient Mediterranean and tenth-century Tibet. It examines how names like Aphrodite, Jesus, and the Indic deitBook Synopsis
How do divine names channel power? This project analyzes, first of all, the invocation of particular divine names (e.g., Jesus, Aphrodite) to access power for activities like healing, protecting, and harming. In so doing, it focuses on texts and artifacts (e.g., amulets) from ancient Mediterranean communities, including both early Christian documents and Greek magical papyri. Additionally, it compares these materials with empowered names from a very different context: 10th-century Tibet, where names were similarly invoked to access otherworldly power, based upon Indic understandings of language. In both contexts, therefore, a primary feature of this project is the analysis of religious experience mediated via invocation of particular names.
The project then builds upon this primary-level onomastic analysis to consider how and why names were believed to work in this manner. Towards this end, the work comparatively considers major onomastic theories from the ancient Mediterranean world, including those of Plato, Origen, Tertullian, and Iamblichus. While the main focus of the project is the ancient Mediterranean world, the book will also address the Indo-Tibetan linguistic theories undergirding artifacts from that context.
About the Author
Joseph L. Kimmel, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, USA.