Martyrdom Canonisation, Contestation and Afterlives
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| Publication date | 2020 |
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| Series | Heritage and Memory Studies |
| Number of pages | 320 |
| Publisher | Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press |
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| Abstract |
The phenomenon of martyrdom is more than 2000 years old but, as contemporary events show, still very much alive. Martyrdom: Canonisation, Contestation and Afterlives
examines the canonisation, contestation and afterlives of martyrdom and
connects these with cross-cultural acts and practices of remembrance.
Martyrdom appeals to the imagination of many because it is a highly
ambiguous spectacle with thrilling deadly consequences. Imagination is
thus a vital catalyst for martyrdom, for martyrs become martyrs only
because others remember and honour them as such. This memorialisation
occurs through rituals and documents that incorporate and re-interpret
traditions deriving from canonical texts. The canonisation of martyrdom
generally occurs in one of two ways: First, through ritual commemoration
by communities of inside readers, listeners, viewers and participants,
who create and recycle texts, re-interpreting them until the martyrs
ultimately receive a canonical status, or second, through commemoration
as a means of contestation by competing communities who perceive these
same people as traitors or terrorists. By adopting an interdisciplinary
orientation and a cross-cultural approach, this book goes beyond both
the insider admiration of martyrs and the partisan rejection of
martyrdoms and concisely synthesises key interpretive questions and
themes that broach the canonised, unstable and contested representations
of martyrdom as well as their analytical connections, divergences and
afterlives in the present.
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| Document type | Book (Editorship) |
| Language | English |
| Related publication | Introduction |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.5117/9789462988187 |
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