From a comparative perspective, international scholars explore the reception and influence of ancient emotion concepts in Byzantine sources. They also shed new light on the Byzantine emotional universe and its impact on medieval and early modern culture.
This volume is the first to explore ancient and Byzantine Greek emotions from a comparative and synoptic perspective. A distinguished international cast of 17 authors deploys the methodologies of Classics, Byzantine Studies, and emotion history to uncover the complex interactions between ancient and Byzantine emotionology. Its wide-ranging chapters shed new light on the Byzantine emotional universe and its impact on medieval and early modern culture and explore the reception and influence of ancient emotion concepts in Byzantine sources. Textual sources are given due prominence, but the volume also investigates wider phenomena such as visual and material culture, performance, ritual, and the creation of emotional landscapes.
Table of contents:
IntroductionDouglas Cairns: Emotions through Time? -
Douglas Cairns: Emotion Research in Classics -
Martin Hinterberger/Aglae Pizzone: Research on Emotions in the Byzantine World -
Douglas Cairns/Martin Hinterberger/Aglae Pizzone: Chapter summaries
I: Philosophy and religionAndrea Capra: Philosophy as a Chain of 'Poetic' Emotions? Plato and Beyond -
Divna Manolova : Wondrous Knowledge and the Emotional Responses of late Byzantine Scholars to its Acquisition -
Petra vonGemünden: Methodological Issues and Issues of Content, as Exemplified by ὀξυχολία in the
Shepherd of Hermas
II: Rhetorical theory and practiceByron MacDougall: Lend a Sympathetic Ear: Rhetorical Theory and Emotion in Late Antique and Byzantine Homiletic -
Aglae Pizzone: Emotions and λόγος ἐνδιάθετος: Πάθη in John Sikeliotes' Commentary on Hermogenes'
On types of style - Floris Bernard : Emotional Communities in the Eleventh Century: Bodily Practices and Emotional Scripts -
Jan Stenger: 'Aren't You Afraid That You Will Suffer the Same?': Emotive Persuasion in John Chrysostom's Preaching -
Niels Gaul: Voicing and Gesturing Emotions: Remarks on Emotive Performance from Antiquity to the Middle Byzantine Period
III: Literature
Douglas Cairns: Mental Conflict from Homer to Eustathius -
Mircea Gratian Duluş: Arousing and Juxtaposing Emotions: Rhetoric and Sensory Imagery in the
Homilies of Philagathos of Cerami -
Margaret Mullett: Tragic Emotions? The
Christos Paschon - Martin Hinterberger:Alazoneia and
Aidōs/Aischunē in Anna Komnene's and Niketas Choniates'
Histories - Stavroula Constantinou: Angry Warriors in the Byzantine
War of Troy
IV: Art and ritualVicky Manolopoulou: Visualizing and Enacting Emotions: The Affective Capacities of the
Litē -Galina Fingarova: Evoking Fear through the Image of the Last Judgement -
Viktoria Räuchle: The Terrible Power in Giving Birth: Images of Motherhood from Antiquity to Byzantium
David Konstan: Afterword