We use cookies to enhance your experience on our website. By continuing to use our website, you are agreeing to our use of cookies. You can change your cookie settings at any time. Find out more

Oxford University Press is a department of the University of Oxford. It furthers the University's objective of excellence in research, scholarship, and education by publishing worldwide.

Print Price: $189.00

Format:
Paperback
462 pp.
138 mm x 216 mm

ISBN-13:
9780198150442

Publication date:
December 1994

Imprint: OUP UK


`Virgins of God'

The Making of Asceticism in Late Antiquity

Susanna Elm

Series : Oxford Classical Monographs

Situated in a period that witnessed the genesis of institutions that have lasted to this day, this path-breaking study looks at how ancient Christian women, particularly in Asia Minor and Egypt, initiated ascetic ways of living, and how these practices were then institutionalized. Susanna Elm demonstrates that--in direct contrast to later conceptions--asceticism began primarly as an urban movement, in which women were significant protagonists.
In the process, they completely transformed and expanded their roles as wife, mother, or widow: as Christian ascetics, they became `virgin wives', `virgin mothers', and `virgin widows' - with all the legal and economic implications of such a dramatic shift. As importantly, though, Christian men and women ascetics lived together. As `virgins of God' they created new families `in Christ'. No longer determined by their human bonds or human sexuality, they were `neither male nor female'.
Finally, the book demonstrates how ascetic bishops - today known as saints - eventually `reformed' these early models of communal, ascetic life by dividing the `virgins of God' into monks and nuns and thus laid the foundation for the monasticism we know today.

Readership : Scholars and students of ancient history, classics, patristics, theology, church history, women's studies.

Reviews

  • `Elm's is one of the most important studies of early Christian asceticism in the twentieth century. Its influence on scholarship pertaining to late antiquity should be enormous. `Virgins of God' is required reading for anyone interested in early Christianity's development.'
    Journal of Religion
  • `an ambitious book ... Instead of three venerable patristic figures, Basil, Pachomius, and Athanasius, as the founding fathers of mansticism, we are now faced with a variegated ascetic tradition in which women and heretics played the pivotal role.'
    Bryn Mawr Classical Review
  • `an exciting book to read; it should be read by anyone interested in early Church history and the role of women in the early Church ... It belongs in every monastic library ... The scholarship is sensible and almost always fascinating.'
    Coptic Church Review
  • `a very well researched and documented academic treatise ... It is, I believe, the first comprehensive study of the place of the virgin in antiquity to be written in English ... challenging and exciting reading ... I welcome the publication of this book and recommend it to all students of the history of ascetic and community life, as well as to those exercised about the future of the consecrated state.'
    M. Ruth Bleakley, Fairacres Chronicle
  • `Anyone interested in either gender studies or the Church will at least want to consult `Virgins of God'... a painstaking detailed account of many diverse sources...'
    Greece and Rome Reviews 42
  • `her book is interesting and important in its placing of the development of this institution, as she sees it, in the framework of the internal political struggles of the Church.'
    Journal of Hellenic Studies
  • `Elm has sought out and made available a number of little-known sources which increase knowledge and understanding of the roles of ascetic women, and in this her study is extremely valuable.'
    Charlotte Methuen, Ecclesiastical Hisotry, Vol. 48, No. 3
  • `Remarkable study...The volume is well written, amply documented and provided with an excellent select bibliography and various indices.'
    The Journal of Indo-European Studies

There is no Table of Contents available at this time.
There are no Instructor/Student Resources available at this time.

Susanna Elm is at University of California, Berkeley.

There are no related titles available at this time.

Please check back for the special features of this book.