Clothing the Body of Christ at Colossae: A Visual Construction of Identity

Author: Rosemary Anne Hayward Canavan

Canavan, Rosemary Anne Hayward, 2011 Clothing the Body of Christ at Colossae: A Visual Construction of Identity, Flinders University, School of Humanities and Creative Arts

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Abstract

What we think of our bodies and what we wear says something about who we are and how we belong. This was this same in the ancient world. This thesis explores the imagery of clothing and body in the first century CE Christian writing, the Letter to the Colossians. Through the use of this imagery in the letter, the writer critiques the way people understood themselves in a particular part of the Greco-Roman world in the Lycus Valley in south western Asia Minor (Turkey). An examination of statuary, funeral monuments and coins in this geographical location contemporaneous with the letter's writing reveals how clothing and body images were understood. This is then placed in dialogue with the metaphorical use of clothing and body in other texts, especially the Letter to the Colossians. Social identity and rhetorical studies draw on archaeological, epigraphical, iconographical and literary sources to formulate a new approach to biblical interpretation aptly named "visual exegesis".

Keywords: Colossae,Colossians,Clothing,Body,Socio-Rhetorical,Identity

Subject: Theology thesis

Thesis type: Doctor of Philosophy
Completed: 2011
School: School of Humanities and Creative Arts
Supervisor: Rev Dr Michael Trainor