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The Virgin and the Bride: Idealized Womanhood in Late Antiquity [Paperback]

Kate Cooper (Author)

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Book Description

May 15, 1999

During the last centuries of the Roman Empire, the prevailing ideal of feminine virtue was radically transformed: the pure but fertile heroines of Greek and Roman romance were replaced by a Christian heroine who ardently refused the marriage bed. How this new concept and figure of purity is connected with--indeed, how it abetted--social and religious change is the subject of Kate Cooper's lively book.

The Romans saw marital concord as a symbol of social unity--one that was important to maintaining the vigor and political harmony of the empire itself. This is nowhere more clear than in the ancient novel, where the mutual desire of hero and heroine is directed toward marriage and social renewal. But early Christian romance subverted the main outline of the story: now the heroine abandons her marriage partner for an otherworldly union with a Christian holy man. Cooper traces the reception of this new ascetic literature across the Roman world. How did the ruling classes respond to the Christian claim to moral superiority, represented by the new ideal of sexual purity? How did women themselves react to the challenge to their traditional role as matrons and matriarchs? In addressing these questions, Cooper gives us a vivid picture of dramatically changing ideas about sexuality, family, and morality--a cultural revolution with far-reaching implications for religion and politics, women and men.

The Virgin and the Bride offers a new look at central aspects of the Christianization of the Roman world, and an engaging discussion of the rhetoric of gender and the social meaning of idealized womanhood.


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Customers buy this book with Greetings in the Lord: Early Christians and the Oxyrhynchus Papyri (Harvard Theological Studies) $23.76

The Virgin and the Bride: Idealized Womanhood in Late Antiquity + Greetings in the Lord: Early Christians and the Oxyrhynchus Papyri (Harvard Theological Studies)


Editorial Reviews

From the Back Cover

Investigates options for women in late antiquity ... Cooper's focus ... is the tension between virginity and marriage as Christian ideals during the rise of the ascetic movement ... She goes further than many previous writers on this period in her confident integration of the 'classical' and 'theological' sources ... [An] excellent study ... a model.-Helen King, Times Literary Supplement

About the Author

Kate Cooper is Senior Lecturer in Early Christianity, University of Manchester.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
"The first without compunction violates his wife, his serving-women, and his attendants, whether young (paedagogia, capillati) or old (exoleti); the second, no longer having the power to give orders outside, in the wider society, no longer has the strength to give them at all: of necessity, he invents for himself a conjugal and sexual morality." Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
disinterested speech, virginal ideal, marital concord, public martyrdom, contra paganos, womanly influence, moral authenticity, ancient romance, ascetic movement, ascetic behavior, ancient novel
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Apocryphal Acts, Acts of Andrew, Passio Anastasiae, Achilles Tatius, Sentences of Sextus, Anicia Demetrias, Dialogues of the Courtesans, Song of Songs
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