Contested Cures: Identity and Ritual Healing in Roman and Late Antique Palestine

Author:   Megan Nutzman (Assistant Professor of History, The Ohio State University)
Publisher:   Edinburgh University Press
ISBN:  

9781399502740


Pages:   272
Publication Date:   15 August 2024
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Contested Cures: Identity and Ritual Healing in Roman and Late Antique Palestine


Overview

In the ancient Mediterranean world, individuals routinely looked for divine aid to cure physical afflictions. Contested Cures argues that the inevitability of sickness and injury made people willing to experiment with seemingly beneficial techniques, even if they originated in a foreign cultural or religious tradition. With circumstances of close cultural contacts, such as prevailed in Palestine, the setting was ripe for neighbouring Jews, Samaritans, Christians, Greeks and Romans to borrow rituals perceived to be efficacious and to alter them to fit their own religious framework. As a result, they employed related means of seeking miraculous cures. The similarities of these rituals, despite changes in the identity of the divine healers that they invoked, made them the subject of polemical discourse among elite authors trying to police collective borders. Contested Cures investigates the resulting intersection of ritual healing and communal identity. This innovative study synthesises evidence for the full range of healing rituals that were practised in the ancient Mediterranean world. Examining both literary and archaeological evidence, it considers ritual healing as a component of identity formation and deconstructs the artificial boundary between 'magic' and 'religion' in relation to ritual cures.

Full Product Details

Author:   Megan Nutzman (Assistant Professor of History, The Ohio State University)
Publisher:   Edinburgh University Press
Imprint:   Edinburgh University Press
ISBN:  

9781399502740


ISBN 10:   1399502743
Pages:   272
Publication Date:   15 August 2024
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

List of IllustrationsList of TablesPrefaceAbbreviationsIntroduction: Roman and Late Antique Palestine Miraculous Objects1. One God who Conquers Evil: Gemstone and Jewelry Amulets2. For I am Yahweh who Heals You: Lamellae and Amulets with Biblical Quotations Miraculous Places3. In this Holy Place: Hot Springs as Sites of Ritual Healing4. In Which Many Miracles Are Worked: Ritual Continuity at Healing Sites Miraculous People5. In the Name of Jesus of Nazareth the Crucified: Ritual Practitioners Who Offered Cures6. Working Such Signs and Wonders: Charismatic Wonderworkers Who Offered Cures Elite Rhetoric7. It Is Better to Die: Elite Rhetoric and Communal Identity Epilogue Bibliography 

Reviews

Contested Cures is an ambitious, empirically rigorous, and theoretically sophisticated interdisciplinary book which decenters the voices of ancient intellectual elites and focuses instead on the lived experience of ordinary people who drew freely upon a range of shared ritual objects, practices, and specialists to ameliorate their physical and psychic suffering. --Elizabeth Castelli, Barnard College Contested Cures is an exceptional work of scholarship on healing practices in the Roman world. Nutzman's regional focus on Roman Palestine, along with her judicious comparative methodology, allow her not only to resist the conventional impulse to study rituals of healing within silos of religious tradition, but also to challenge facile distinctions among the domains of religion, magic, and medicine. What emerges is a fascinating and compelling portrait of how the diverse inhabitants of the region turned for treatment to similar--and, in many cases, the very same--objects, places, and people, even as religious elites sought to segment this shared therapeutic landscape and thus to police the boundaries between communities. --Ra'anan Boustan, Research Scholar, Princeton University


Contested Cures is an ambitious, empirically rigorous, and theoretically sophisticated interdisciplinary book which decenters the voices of ancient intellectual elites and focuses instead on the lived experience of ordinary people who drew freely upon a range of shared ritual objects, practices, and specialists to ameliorate their physical and psychic suffering. -- Elizabeth Castelli, Barnard College Contested Cures is an exceptional work of scholarship on healing practices in the Roman world. Nutzman’s regional focus on Roman Palestine, along with her judicious comparative methodology, allow her not only to resist the conventional impulse to study rituals of healing within silos of religious tradition, but also to challenge facile distinctions among the domains of religion, magic, and medicine. What emerges is a fascinating and compelling portrait of how the diverse inhabitants of the region turned for treatment to similar—and, in many cases, the very same—objects, places, and people, even as religious elites sought to segment this shared therapeutic landscape and thus to police the boundaries between communities. -- Ra'anan Boustan, Research Scholar, Princeton University


Author Information

Megan Nutzman is an Assistant Professor in Classics at Ohio State University

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