Ethnography and historical imagination in reading Jesus as an exorcist

The essay starts by looking at how Jesus as healer and exorcist has been interpreted in European tradition and points out the association between this interpretation and the secularisation of the body and the development of medicine as key aspects of modernization of Western societies. The next part...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Moxnes, Halvor 1944- (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: NTWSA 2010
In: Neotestamentica
Year: 2010, Volume: 44, Issue: 2, Pages: 327-341
Online Access: Volltext (JSTOR)
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Parallel Edition:Non-electronic
Description
Summary:The essay starts by looking at how Jesus as healer and exorcist has been interpreted in European tradition and points out the association between this interpretation and the secularisation of the body and the development of medicine as key aspects of modernization of Western societies. The next part shows by using a case study from Ethnography and the Historical Imagination by John and Jean Comaroff how modern medicine and colonisation were closely linked. A third part presents a counter-position from a study from Colombia by the anthropologist Michael Taussig. Taussig describes how shamanism functioned as an expression of local power against the effects of colonisation. Inspired by perspectives from the Comaroffs and Taussig the last part suggests a reading of the Beelzebul pericopee in Luke 11:14-20 from a "hermeneutics of suspicion", focusing on the power aspects of the spatial terminology of the passage.
ISSN:2518-4628
Contains:Enthalten in: Neotestamentica
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.10520/EJC83390