Full title
Introductory Reflections on Embodiment in Hellenistic Judaism
Research notes
Reader Checked|19/06/2013 SE
Reference type
Year
2011
Journal / Book Title || Series Title
Journal for the Study of the Pseudepigrapha
Volume
21
Number of volumes
0
Issue / Series Volume
1
Pages
5-19
Label
21/11/2011
Abstract
This article examines different uses of the body to express identity in Judeo-Hellenistic narratives. It analyzes four interplays where the body stands for the human self, either as a factor of recognition, as expression of national and religious identity, as a way to mock one’s religion and ethnicity, and as a representation of the living self. The body therefore appears, well before the Rabbinic period, as a frequent resource to express and construct identity. The research confirms recent studies, which have shown that Diasporic communities tend to inscribe identity on the body, rather than use territorial markers.