Reading darkness : the burial of the Johannine Christ

This thesis identifies and develops the discourse of darkness in the Gospel of John. It approaches the theme as both a textual motif, Johannine σκοτία, and a discussion of negative elements within the text, viewed from a feminist perspective. Scholars have long considered the aspect of light, φῶς, i...

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Main Author: Finch, Yasmin
Other Authors: Pyper, Hugh ; ØKland, Jorunn
Published: University of Sheffield 2013
Subjects:
220
Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.729473
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-7294732019-03-05T15:40:39ZReading darkness : the burial of the Johannine ChristFinch, YasminPyper, Hugh ; ØKland, Jorunn2013This thesis identifies and develops the discourse of darkness in the Gospel of John. It approaches the theme as both a textual motif, Johannine σκοτία, and a discussion of negative elements within the text, viewed from a feminist perspective. Scholars have long considered the aspect of light, φῶς, in the Gospel and Jesus’ characterisation as ‘the light.’ The motif of darkness, however, has been relatively underexplored and an association made between Jesus, his burial, and the theme of σκοτία, rarer still. This thesis considers Johannine σκοτία in terms of death, trauma, and abjection, and traces the descent of the motif through the passion account to its nadir in the burial scene. Historical enquiry is used to establish what might be considered expected first-century norms with regards to the crucified Jewish corpse in first-century Palestine and this thesis proposes a reading of the burial text which problematises positivistic interpretations of the burial ritual that Joseph and Nicodemus undertake. A study of the mother of Jesus in the Gospel reveals maternal abjection as a negative force within the text and identifies that when she fails to make the narrative journey from cross to grave, all is not well. Finally the thesis presents a detailed study of John 19:42b, the closing depiction of Jesus’ corpse laid out in the tomb. The painting of Hans Holbein the Younger The Dead Christ in the Tomb, the writing of Fyodor Dostoyevsky, and the theory of Julia Kristeva, are drawn into a discussion of the image, or the ‘last look,’ at the corpse of Christ contained in this verse.220University of Sheffieldhttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.729473http://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/18972/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 220
spellingShingle 220
Finch, Yasmin
Reading darkness : the burial of the Johannine Christ
description This thesis identifies and develops the discourse of darkness in the Gospel of John. It approaches the theme as both a textual motif, Johannine σκοτία, and a discussion of negative elements within the text, viewed from a feminist perspective. Scholars have long considered the aspect of light, φῶς, in the Gospel and Jesus’ characterisation as ‘the light.’ The motif of darkness, however, has been relatively underexplored and an association made between Jesus, his burial, and the theme of σκοτία, rarer still. This thesis considers Johannine σκοτία in terms of death, trauma, and abjection, and traces the descent of the motif through the passion account to its nadir in the burial scene. Historical enquiry is used to establish what might be considered expected first-century norms with regards to the crucified Jewish corpse in first-century Palestine and this thesis proposes a reading of the burial text which problematises positivistic interpretations of the burial ritual that Joseph and Nicodemus undertake. A study of the mother of Jesus in the Gospel reveals maternal abjection as a negative force within the text and identifies that when she fails to make the narrative journey from cross to grave, all is not well. Finally the thesis presents a detailed study of John 19:42b, the closing depiction of Jesus’ corpse laid out in the tomb. The painting of Hans Holbein the Younger The Dead Christ in the Tomb, the writing of Fyodor Dostoyevsky, and the theory of Julia Kristeva, are drawn into a discussion of the image, or the ‘last look,’ at the corpse of Christ contained in this verse.
author2 Pyper, Hugh ; ØKland, Jorunn
author_facet Pyper, Hugh ; ØKland, Jorunn
Finch, Yasmin
author Finch, Yasmin
author_sort Finch, Yasmin
title Reading darkness : the burial of the Johannine Christ
title_short Reading darkness : the burial of the Johannine Christ
title_full Reading darkness : the burial of the Johannine Christ
title_fullStr Reading darkness : the burial of the Johannine Christ
title_full_unstemmed Reading darkness : the burial of the Johannine Christ
title_sort reading darkness : the burial of the johannine christ
publisher University of Sheffield
publishDate 2013
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.729473
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