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The Motif of Lovesickness in the Acts of Paul and Thecla and the Acts of Andrew

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title
The Motif of Lovesickness in the Acts of Paul and Thecla and the Acts of Andrew
author
Cobb, Christy
abstract
This thesis explores the literary motif of lovesickness in two early Christian ascetic texts - the Acts of Paul and Thecla and the Acts of Andrew. In order to argue that the authors of these texts utilized lovesickness as a motif, I contextualize the illness in contemporaneous literature including medical texts, Greek poetry and literature, and ancient Greek novels. After showing that lovesickness was a concern in this literature, I engage in an exegetical reading of the Acts of Paul and Thecla and the Acts of Andrew. I suggest that the astute reader might have recognized the symptoms of lovesickness in these sections of the Apocryphal Acts because of the inclusion and utilization of this motif in contemporaneous literature. Furthermore, I argue that these Christian authors intentionally used lovesickness as a narrative strategy to eroticize the relationship between the follower and the apostle. I note that the symptoms of lovesickness are experienced only by the follower, and not by the apostle, making the relationship uni-directional. Therefore, this thesis identifies a motif of lovesickness in the Apocryphal Acts and argues that this motif functions to elevate the status of the apostle within the narrative.
subject
Lovesickness
Apocryphal Acts of the Apostles
Acts of Paul
Acts of Andrew
Early Christian Literature
Thecla
contributor
Horton, Fred (committee chair)
Foskett, Mary (committee member)
Neal, Lynn (committee member)
date
2010-05-07T19:10:49Z (accessioned)
2010-06-18T18:57:52Z (accessioned)
2010-05-07T19:10:49Z (available)
2010-06-18T18:57:52Z (available)
2010-05-07T19:10:49Z (issued)
degree
Religion (discipline)
identifier
http://hdl.handle.net/10339/14723 (uri)
language
en_US (iso)
publisher
Wake Forest University
rights
Release the entire work for access only to the Wake Forest University system for one year from the date below. After one year, release the entire work for access worldwide. (accessRights)
type
Thesis

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