توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب The Oxford Handbook of Mary
نام کتاب : The Oxford Handbook of Mary
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : دفترچه راهنمای آکسفورد مری
سری :
نویسندگان : Chris Maunder
ناشر : Oxford University Press, USA
سال نشر : 2019
تعداد صفحات : 723
ISBN (شابک) : 9780198792550 , 0198792557
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 6 مگابایت
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فهرست مطالب :
Cover\nThe Oxford Handbook of MARY\nCopyright\nPreface\nContents\nList of Figures\nList of Contributors\nIntroduction\n Mary and Jesus of Nazareth\n Mary and Gender\n Doctrines of Mary and Christian Denominations\n Veneration of Mary, Pilgrimage, and Apparitions\n The Handbook of Mary\n Works Cited\n Recommended Reading\nPart I: FOUNDATIONS\n Chapter 1: Mary and the Gospel Narratives\n Introduction\n Mark’s Gospel\n The Development of the Gospel Tradition\n The Birth and Infancy Narratives\n The Cross and Resurrection\n Conclusion\n Works Cited\n Vatican Documents\n Recommended Reading\n Chapter 2: Mary in the Apocrypha\n Introduction\n Mary, The Mother of God\n Mary, The Disciple of Jesus\n Mary, The Heavenly Sojourner\n Lives of Mary\n Works Cited\n Recommended Reading\n Chapter 3: Mary in Patristics\n The Bible and Mary\n Mary in Second-Century Christian Thought and Narration\n The Protevangelium of James, Mary and other Apocryphal Literature\n The Emergence of Mariology\n Works Cited\n Primary Sources\n Secondary Sources\n Recommended Reading\n Chapter 4: The Virgin as Theotokos at Ephesus (AD 431) and Earlier\n Did Ephesus Define that the Virgin is Theotokos?\n The Theotokos Title and the Nestorian Controversy\n The Supreme Dignity of the Virgin\n Works Cited\n Recommended Reading\n Chapter 5: Marian Typological and Symbolic Imagery in Patristic Christianity\n What is Typology?\n Marian Typology\n Earth\n Encomia\n Works Cited\n Primary Sources\n Secondary Sources\n Recommended Reading\n Chapter 6: Mary in Islam\n Mary in the Qur’an\n Mary in Islamic Theology and Spirituality\n Mary and Inter-Faith Dialogue\n Works Cited\n Recommended Reading\nPart II: MARY IN THE EASTERN CHURCHES\n Chapter 7: Mary in the Hymnody of the East\n The Magnificat\n Under your Protection\n The Chairetismoi Hymns\n Proklos\n Mary in the Hymns of Romanos the Melodist\n The Great Akathist Hymn\n Mary in the Hymns of the Byzantine Liturgical Offices\n Works Cited\n Recommended Reading\n Chapter 8: The Virgin Mary Theotokos in Orthodox Piety\n Introduction\n From the Byzantine Empire (5th Century AD–1453) Until Today\n Greece\n Russia\n Miraculous Icons in Russia\n Other Orthodox Nations\n Oriental Orthodox Churches\n Conclusion\n Works Cited\n Internet Sources (accessed 31 August 2018)\n Recommended Reading\n Chapter 9: Mary as Intercessor in Byzantine Theology\n Dormition Apocrypha\n Marian Intercession in Byzantine Hymnography and Homiletics\n Middle Byzantine Apocalyptic Travel Literature\n The Apocalypse of the Theotokos\n The Vision of Anastasia\n Mary’s Intercession ThroughIcons and Litanies\n Lives of the Virgin\n Conclusion\n Works Cited\n Recommended Reading\n Chapter 10: Byzantine Festal Homilies on The Virgin Mary\n Dogmatic Teaching\n Moral Teaching\n Narratives: Biblical and Apocryphal\n Intercessory Invocation\n Conclusion\n Works Cited\n Recommended Reading\n Chapter 11: The Doctrine of the Theotokos in Gregorios Palamas\n The Life of Gregorios Palamas\n The Marian Writings of Gregorios Palamas\n The Marian Doctrine of Gregorios Palamas\n Conclusions\n Works Cited\n Primary Sources\n Secondary Sources\n Recommended Reading\n Chapter 12: The Russian Spiritual Verses on the Mother of God\n Introduction\n Performers and Performance\n The Virgin Weeping at the Cross\n In Search of her Son\n The Virgin’s Intercession\n The Last Judgement\n Conclusion\n Works Cited\n Recommended Reading\n Chapter 13: The Mother of God in Finnish Orthodox Women’s Lived Piety: Converted and Skolt Sámi Voices\n Orthodox Tradition in Finland\n Ethnographic Research on Women’s Devotion to the Virgin Mary\n Conversion, Gender, and the Mother of God\n Skolt Sámi Women and the Virgin Mary\n Conclusions\n Works Cited\n Recommended Reading\n Chapter 14: Marian Devotion in the Contemporary Eastern Mediterranean\n Mary in the Eastern Mediterranean\n The Mother of Minorities: Mary in the Eastern Mediterranean as Vehicle of Resistance\n The Mother of Jerusalem and the Dormition Feast\n The Procession\n The Rituals in Mary’s Tomb\n Conclusion\n Works Cited\n Recommended Reading\n Chapter 15: Mary in Modern Orthodox Theology\n Introduction: Mary in Orthodox Worship and Devotion\n Sergii Bulgakov\n Vladimir Lossky\n Dumitru Stăniloae\n Paul Evdokimov\n Works Cited\n Patristic and Liturgical Sources\n Modern Sources\n Recommended Reading\nPart III: MARIAN THEMES IN WESTERN CHRISTIANITY\n Chapter 16: The Virgin Mary in the Hymns of the Catholic Church\n Early Latin Hymns\n The Middle Ages\n The Council of Trent\n Hymnody in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries\n Renewal in Catholic Hymnody\n The Hymn in Post-Conciliar Catholic Liturgy\n Vatican II’s Image of the Virgin Mary: An Agenda for Hymns\n Marian Hymns Sampler\n Works Cited\n Vatican Documents\n Recommended Reading\n Chapter 17: The Papacy and Maria Regina Imagery in Roman Churches between the Sixth and Twelfth Centuries\n Introduction: The Origin and Meaning of Maria Regina Iconography in Rome\n The Palimpsest Madonna in the Sanctuary at St Maria Antiqua\n Two Maria Regina Images Commissioned by Pope John VII\n Eighth-Century Maria Regina Images in St Maria Antiqua Depicting Popes Zaccaria (741–752) and Hadrian I (772–795)\n The Probable Maria Regina in The Theodotus Chapel at St Maria Antiqua, Enthroned with Pope Zaccaria and Primicerius Theodotus\n Maria Regina Images in Twelfth-Century Rome: St Maria in Trastevere\n The Image of Mary With A ‘Bevy’ of Popes in the Oratory of St Nicholas at the Lateran Palace\n Conclusions\n Works Cited\n Recommended Reading\n Chapter 18: Mary and Grace\n Biblical Background to Mary’s Grace\n Patristic Background to Mary’s Grace\n Medieval and Modern Developments Regarding Mary’s Grace\n Conclusion\n Works Cited\n Recommended Reading\n Chapter 19: Mary in the Work of Redemption\n Mary’s Cooperation in the Work of Redemption\n Scriptural and Patristic Foundations\n Medieval and Renaissance Developments\n The Counter-Reformation: Golden Age of Marian Co-Redemption\n Catholic Magisterial Support\n Efforts to Define Mary as Mediatrix of all Graces and/or Coredemptrix\n Objections to Mary as Mediatrix of all Graces and Coredemptrix\n Conclusion\n Works Cited\n Recommended Reading\n Chapter 20: The Patristic and Medieval Roots of Mary’s Humility\n Humility in the Greco-Roman World\n Humility in the Old and New Testaments\n Mary and Humility in the Church Fathers\n Marian Humilityin the Medieval West\n Conclusion\n Works Cited\n Primary Sources\n Secondary Sources\n Recommended Reading\n Chapter 21: Mary in Medieval Prayer: The Hours of the Virgin\n The Development of the Hours of the Virgin as a Practice\n The Structure and Texts of the Hours of the Virgin\n The Lord of the Psalms and his Mother as Revealed in her Office\n Making the Maker Visible to the World\n Works Cited\n Recommended Reading\n Chapter 22: The Idea of Mary as ‘Sister’ in Carmelite Mariology\n Introduction\n Background to Mary as ‘Sister’\n The Use of the Term ‘Sister’ in Carmelite Writings\n Mary and Elijah as Models of Purity\n ‘Sister’ as Solidarity with Humanity\n Conclusion\n Works Cited\n Recommended Reading\n Chapter 23: Mary in Medieval Hispanic Literatures\n Mary’s Miraculous Intervention\n Shrines and Pilgrimage Sites\n Glossing Marian Hymns\n Mary’s Feasts: Conception\n Assumption\n Praises of Mary\n Mary’s Joys\n Mary in the Christmas Cycle\n Mary in the Easter Cycle\n Conclusion\n Works Cited\n Primary sources\n Secondary sources\n Recommended Reading\n Chapter 24: The Annunciation from Luke to the Enlightenment: A Cultural History\n Works Cited\n Recommended Reading\nPart IV: MARY IN THE WEST FROM THE REFORMATION\n Chapter 25: Mary, Gender, and the English Reformation\n Mary as the Telos of Humanity\n Mary as Pre-Reformation Exemplar\n Mary as Post-Reformation Exemplar\n Mary and Sixteenth-Century English Misogyny\n Conclusion\n Works Cited\n Recommended Reading\n Chapter 26: Chasing the Lady: Revealing, Reforming, and Restoring the Virgin Mary in the Eucharist during the English Reformations and beyond\n Introduction\n The Sarum Rite\n Euchology\n The Calendar (see the Table of Feast Days of the Blessed Virgin Mary)\n Images of Mary within the Sequences\n The Crib\n The Cross\n The Crown\n Cranmer and Beyond\n Euchology\n Calendar (see Table of Feast Days of the Blessed Virgin Mary)\n Sequences\n Recent Developments\n Conclusion\n Works Cited\n Recommended Reading\n Chapter 27: Mary in Luther and the Lutheran Reformation\n Late Medieval Piety\n Critiques of Late Medieval Marian Devotion\n Luther’s Critiques\n Luther’s Positive Perspective on Mary\n Luther’s View on Catholic Doctrines\n Wider Ramifications of Luther’s Theology\n Works Cited\n Recommended Reading\n Chapter 28: Mariology in the Counter Reformation\n Mary and the Council of Trent (1545–63)\n The Development of Systematic Mariology in the Post-Tridentine Age\n The French’s School’s Contribution to Mariology and Marian Devotion\n The Mariology of Mystics and Visionaries\n Jansenism and Mariology\n Conclusion\n Works Cited\n Recommended Reading\n Chapter 29: Mary and Inculturation in Mexico and India\n The Importance of Being Immaculate: The Meaning and Function of Mary’s Images in Sixteenth-Century Iberian Catholicism\n The Virgin Immaculate in Mexico and the Prehispanic Goddess\n The Virgin Immaculate in India and the Indian Goddess\n Works Cited\n Recommended Reading\n Chapter 30: Original Holiness: The Blessed Virgin Mary in the Catholic Theology of Nineteenth-Century Europe\n Introduction\n Theological Trends\n Enlightenment Scepticism\n Neo-scholasticism\n Theology from Tradition\n Theology in Popular Devotion\n The Fundamental Principle\n The Marian Age\n Works Cited\n Recommended Reading\n Chapter 31: Mary as Cultural Symbol in the Nineteenth Century\n Introduction\n Mary and the Feminine Ideal\n Marian Devotion as Anti-Modern\n Mary as a Marker of Identity\n Conclusion\n Works Cited\n Recommended Reading\n Chapter 32: Mariology at and after the Second Vatican Council\n Mary at the Second Vatican Council\n Mary in the Papal Magisterium after the Second Vatican Council: Blessed Pope Paul VI (1963–1978)\n Pope Saint John Paul II (1978–2005)\n Pope Benedict XVI (2005–2013)\n Works Cited\n Vatican Documents\n Recommended Reading\n Chapter 33: Mary and Modernity\n Mary’s Role in the Emergence of Modernity\n The Church’s Response to the Secular Modern State, 1830–1962: A Re-Emphasized Spiritual Presence of Mary\n Vatican II: Modernizing the Church—and the Marian Presence\n Mary in the Wake of Vatican II\n Marian Aggiornamento in the Twenty-First Century\n Works Cited\n Recommended Reading\n Chapter 34: Symbol, Vision, Mother: Mary in Film\n Symbol\n Vision\n Mother\n Conclusion\n Works Cited\n Filmography\n Recommended Reading\nPart V: MARIAN PILGRIMAGE, APPARITIONS, AND MIRACLES\n Chapter 35: Medieval Marian Pilgrimage in the Catholic West\n Works Cited\n Recommended Reading\n Chapter 36: Marian Piety and Gender: Marian Devotion and the ‘Feminization’ of Religion\n Mother Mary\n A New Type of Visionary?\n Gender Hierarchy and Differentiation\n Miraculées: Catholic Celebrities and Hysterics\n Politicization of Marian Devotion and Gender: ‘Masculinity’ in the Fray\n Men’s Pilgrimages\n Conclusion\n Works Cited\n Recommended Reading\n Chapter 37: Mary and Migrant Communities: Pilgrimage and African Mary-craft in Europe\n Witchcraft and Mary-Craft: Corresponding Practices\n African Migrant Women in Paris\n Emmanuelle’s Track as a Marian Professional\n From Congo to France\n The Miraculous Healing of her Only Daughter\n Building Spiritual Capital and the Unexpected Death of her Father\n Seeing the Madonna in the Morning Sun\n Emmanuelle’s Mary-craft\n The Medicine\n Empowerment\n Emmanuelle among her Fellow Pilgrims\n Conclusion\n Works Cited\n Recommended Reading\n Chapter 38: Mary in a Mobile World: The Anthropology of a Moving Symbol\n The Many Voices of Mary\n Marian Mobilities\n Shifting Interpretations\n Border Crossings\n Mitigating Movement\n The Wider Catholic Landscape\n Works Cited\n Recommended Reading\n Chapter 39: Mary and Multi-Faith Pilgrimages\n Ancient Convergences in Palestine\n Shared Marian Sanctuaries in the Long Term\n The Birth of New Marian Sites Attracting Muslims\n A Brief Overview\n Works Cited\n Recommended Reading\n Chapter 40: Mary and Modern Catholic Material Culture\n Continuity and Change in Rosary Devotion\n The ‘Miraculous’ Rose Petals of Lipa, the Philippines\n Mary and Modern Material Culture as Public Global Culture\n Surfaces, Screens, and the Material Culture of Mary in a Digital World\n Works Cited\n Internet Sources\n Recommended Reading\n Chapter 41: Marian Apocalypticism\n The Historical Development of Marian Apocalypticism\n Fátima, the Cold War, and Apocalyptic Secrets\n Marian Apocalypse Now: The Ongoing Influence of Unapproved Apparitions\n Conclusion\n Works Cited\n Recommended Reading\n Chapter 42: The Global Network of Deviant Revelatory Marian Movements\n Apparitional Timeframe and Context\n Deviancy\n The Visionaries\n The Devotees\n The Network Identified\n Prayer Groups and Publishers\n Facilitators\n Conclusion\n Works Cited\n Recommended Reading\nIndex\nIndex of Biblical and Apocryphal Texts