Synopses & Reviews
This book depicts the lives of female monks within a monastery located in upper Egypt in the period 385-464 CE. During this period, the monastery was headed by a monk named Shenoute; thirteen of his letters to the women under his care survive. These writings are fragmentary, only partially translated, little studied, and written in difficult-to-decipher Coptic. Despite these problems, Krawiec has used the letters to reconstruct a series of quarrels and events in the life of the White Monastery and to discern some of the key patterns in the participants' relationships to one another within the world as they perceived it.
Review
"This well-written book is an important contribution to the study of Egyptian monasticism and Egyptian church history."--Religious Studies Review
"A work of painstaking historical reconstruction, this book also offers a sophisticated and original theoretical reading of the way power and gender shaped the life of a particular early Christian monastic community. It is the deft weaving of these two perspectives that makes this work such a valuable contribution to our emerging understanding of ancient Christian monasticism."-- American Benedictine Review
"Superior work...one of the best discussions of monastic life and its nuances that I have seen."--David Frankfurter, University of New Hampshire, Author of Religion in Roman Egypt
"Under the long tenure of its abbot Shenoute (385-465), the White Monastery grew to become one of the most important centers of monasticism in ancient Egypt, including several thousand monks, both male and female. Yet this dynamic and controversial leader and his many followers remain poorly known and misunderstood among contemporary historians. Rebecca Krawiec's outstanding book gives us intimate access to a community of vibrant ascetic women chafing under the leadership of a stern and irascible man. Making use of newly recovered and untranslated Coptic sources, Krawiec shows how conflicts and negotiations over everyday issues like food and clothing constructed monastic authority, holy space, gender, and family. This gracefully written study will appeal to readers interested in early Christianity, monasticism, late antiquity, and gender studies."--David Brakke, Department of Religious Studies, Indiana University, Author of Athanasius and the Politics of Asceticism
Table of Contents
Abbreviations
Introduction
1. Daily Life in the White Monastery under Shenoute
2. Women's Life in the White Monastery under Shenoute
3. Shenoute's Discourse of Monastic Power
4. Acceptance and Resistance: The Women's Power
5. "They too are Our Brethren": Gender in the White Monastery
6. Gender and Monasticism in Late Antiquity
7. Women's Role in the Monastic Family: The Intersection of Power and Gender
8. "According to the Flesh": Biological Kin in the White Monastery
Notes
Bibliography
Index