Children and Family in Late Antique Egyptian Monasticism

by Caroline T. Schroeder

Hardcover, 2020

Status

Available

Call number

276.2

Collection

Publication

Cambridge University Press (2020), 248 pages

Description

This is the first book-length study of children in one of the birthplaces of early Christian monasticism, Egypt. Although comprised of men and women who had renounced sex and family, the monasteries of late antiquity raised children, educated them, and expected them to carry on their monastic lineage and legacies into the future. Children within monasteries existed in a liminal space, simultaneously vulnerable to the whims and abuses of adults and also cherished as potential future monastic prodigies. Caroline T. Schroeder examines diverse sources - letters, rules, saints' lives, art, and documentary evidence - to probe these paradoxes. In doing so, she demonstrates how early Egyptian monasteries provided an intergenerational continuity of social, cultural, and economic capital while also contesting the traditional family's claims to these forms of social continuity.… (more)

Media reviews

Caroline Schroeder writes on a topic that some might think challenging, if not quixotic: an examination of the place of children in the monasteries of late antique Egypt. The breadth of her study, running from the fourth to eighth centuries, would seem to complicate the matter further—these were
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eventful years for both Egypt and the Mediterranean more broadly. Yet despite these practical and conceptual hurdles, Schroeder is reasonably successful in her pursuit. The first two chapters assemble and assess the evidence for their presence both within and in close proximity to these religious communities. The next three chapters analyze the representation of children in monastic literature, focusing on them as objects of both wanted and unwanted adult attentions and mostly as a means to more fully articulating the religious and cultural roles of ascetics in the broader society. The last three chapters are an exercise in social history, trying to reconstruct the experience of childhood in late antique Egypt and the mechanisms for maintaining and recreating the structures of family. A concluding chapter argues for the monastic house serving as both an analogue and a challenge to the private household’s social and cultural place in the ancient Mediterranean world.
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Language

Original language

English

Physical description

248 p.; 9 inches

ISBN

1107156874 / 9781107156876

Local notes

MJW
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