Reading with an "I" to the Heavens: Looking at the Qumran Hodayot through the Lens of Visionary Traditions

Full title
Reading with an "I" to the Heavens: Looking at the Qumran Hodayot through the Lens of Visionary Traditions
Research notes

Reader Checked|OA 12/11/2013

Reference type
Author(s)
Harkins, Angela Kim
Year
2012
Issue / Series Volume
3
Series Title
Ekstasis: Religious Experience from Antiquity to the Middle Ages
Publisher
de Gruyter
Place of Publication
Berlin
Label
25/06/2012
Abstract

This book examines the collection of prayers known as the Qumran Hodayot (= Thanksgiving Hymns) in light of ancient visionary traditions, new developments in neuropsychology, and post-structuralist understandings of the embodied subject. The thesis of this book is that the ritualized reading of reports describing visionary experiences written in the first person "I" had the potential to create within the ancient reader the subjectivity of a visionary which can then predispose him to have a religious experience. This study examines how references to the body and the strategic arousal of emotions could have functioned within a practice of performative reading to engender a religious experience of ascent. In so doing, this book offers new interdisciplinary insights into meditative ritual reading as a religious practice for transformation in antiquity.