Part I:The Martyr and her genderPart II:Authority and testimonyPart III:The Text, the Cannon, and the Margins.
Jan N. Bremmer and Marco FormisanoThe Passion of Saints Perpetua and Felicity / translated by Joseph Farrell & Craig Williams: Perpetua's Passions: A Brief Introduction
Jan N. Bremmer: Felicitas: The Martyrdom of a Young African Woman
Craig Williams: Perpetua's Gender. A Latinist Reads the 'Passio Perpetuae et Felicitatis'
Walter Ameling: 'Femina liberaliter instituta': Some Thoughts on a Martyr's Liberal Education
Hanne Sigismund-Nielsen: 'Vibia Perpetua': An Indecent Woman
Jan Willem van Henten: The 'Passio Perpetuae' and Jewish Martyrdom: The Motif of Motherly Love
Mieke Bal: Perpetual Contest
Julia Weitbrecht: Maternity and Sainthood in the Medieval Perpetua Legend
Jan den Boeft: The Editor's Prime Objective: 'haec in aedificationem Ecclesiae legere'
Sigrid Weigel, translated by Joel Golb: Exemplum and Sacrifice, Blood Testimony and Written Testimony: Lucretia and Perpetua as Transitional Figures in the Cultural History of Martyrdom
Katharina Waldner: Visions, Prophecy and Authority in the 'Passio Perpetuae'
Katharina Waldner / Hartmut Bohme: The Conquest of the Real by the Imaginary: on the 'Passio Perpetuae'
Giulia Sissa: Socrates' Passion
Luca Bagetto: 'Nova exempla': The New Testament of the 'Passio Perpetuae'
Christoph Markschies: The 'Passio Sanctarum Perpetuae et Felicitatis' and Montanism?
David Konstan: Perpetua's Martyrdom and the Metamorphosis of Narrative
Joseph Farrell: The Canonization of Perpetua
Philippe Mesnard: The Power of Uncertainty: Interpreting the 'Passion of Perpetua and Felicitas'
Marco Formisano: Perpetua's Prisons: Notes on the Margins of Literature
|