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Jews, Christians, and the Discourse on Images Before Iconoclasm

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Jews, Christians, and the Discourse on Images Before Iconoclasm Synopsis

Between the sixth and eighth centuries CE, the image emerged as a rhetorical category in religious literature produced in the Mediterranean basin. The development was not a uniquely Christian phenomenon. Rather, it emerged in the context of broader debates about symbolic forms that took place across a wide range of ethnic, linguistic, and religious groups who inhabited the late Roman and early Byzantine world. In this book, Alexei Sivertsev demonstrates how Jewish texts serve as an important, and until recently overlooked, witness to the formation of image discourse and associated practices of image veneration in late antiquity and the early Middle Ages. Addressing the role of the image as a rhetorical device in Jewish liturgical poetry, Sivertsev also considers the theme of the engraved image of Jacob in its early Byzantine context and the aesthetics of spaces that bridge the gap between the material and the immaterial in early Byzantine imagination.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9781009424530
Publication date: 8th February 2024
Author: Alexei Sivertsev
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Format: Hardback
Pagination: 275 pages
Genres: Judaism
Religious and ceremonial art
Christianity