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Pour les autres auteurs qui s'appellent Kate Cooper, voyez la page de désambigüisation.

10+ oeuvres 178 utilisateurs 2 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Crédit image: Photo by Hester Leyser

Œuvres de Kate Cooper

Oeuvres associées

A Companion to Late Antiquity (2009) — Contributeur — 46 exemplaires
The Blackwell Companion to the Bible and Culture (2006) — Contributeur — 39 exemplaires
A Companion to Augustine (1913) — Contributeur — 20 exemplaires
A Companion to Families in the Greek and Roman Worlds (2010) — Contributeur — 13 exemplaires
The End of Dialogue in Antiquity (2009) — Contributeur — 12 exemplaires
Virginity revisited configurations of the unpossessed body (2007) — Contributeur — 5 exemplaires
Social and political life in late Antiquity (2006) — Contributeur — 5 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Date de naissance
1960
Sexe
female
Pays (pour la carte)
UK
Professions
historian
Organisations
University of Manchester

Membres

Critiques

The Virgin and the Bride reassesses a series of literary sources, both pagan and Christian, to see how a change in dominant modes of authority (from civic to religious) and the rise of asceticism in late antiquity changed representations of femaleness, virginity, and marriage. Cooper argues that we should read texts about virgins, and especially virgin martyrs, in Late Antiquity less as arguments about virginity than as discussions of authority, with male writers appropriating the female body as a rhetorical tool. It's an interesting thesis, one which offers some interesting new ways of looking at the surviving sources, and I appreciated the reminder that the Christian texts which have come down to us are not necessarily representative of the mainstream of Late Antique Christian opinion. However, as a whole the book just clunked for me—Cooper's prose never rises above the serviceable—and she definitely seems more a literary scholar than a historian. I felt at times that she was constructing her argument within a sort of generic 'Rome' than within specific contexts—would this hold true in third century Rome? fourth century Carthage? sixth century Constantinople?—more a theoretical work than a historical one.… (plus d'informations)
½
 
Signalé
siriaeve | Sep 7, 2011 |
 
Signalé
KindredSpirits | Jul 10, 2014 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
10
Aussi par
9
Membres
178
Popularité
#120,889
Évaluation
½ 3.7
Critiques
2
ISBN
42

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