"Dispassionate Passion" in Gregory of Nyssa's 'In Canticum Canticorum'

被引:0
|
作者
Solomonik-Pankrasova, Tatjana [1 ]
机构
[1] Vilnius Univ, Dept German Philol, Kaunas Fac, Vilnius, Lithuania
来源
LOGOS-VILNIUS | 2017年 / 92期
关键词
St. Gregory of Nyssa; apophatic theology; anagogic ascent; image; oxymoron;
D O I
10.24101/logos.2017.43
中图分类号
C [社会科学总论];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ;
摘要
It is the anagogic ascent (ayayanifj) of the Soul - the image of the Image - to the Archetypal Beauty (KaAAoc) that lies at the heart of Byzantine aesthetics. In view of aesthetica interior (monastic aesthetics), the dwelling place of Beauty is the secret chamber of one's heart. The Soul's kinship with the divine, the search for God and a reluctance to be satisfied with anything less than Him lies at the heart of Christian mysticism. The Soul is attracted by the Ineffable Beauty that is beyond the grasp of senses. This is where the tradition of Byzantine aesthetics meets Christian mystical tradition. Because the Soul is "wounded" by the Beauty of the Divine, it is inclined to escape the darkness of the sensuous world, admiring the Ineffable Beauty of the Divine. This article aims at deciphering the allegory of the Soul who puts on "the raiment of light" clinging to the Bridegroom through love in the In Canticum Canticorum by St. Gregory of Nyssa. My argument proceeds in the following way: first, to unravel the allegorical portrayal of the Soul as a Sister and a Bride a reflection of the Ineffable Beauty, and, second, to unveil "the erotic images of the noetic imageless" with reference to the rhetorical figure of speech, viz., oxymoron.
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页码:18 / 25
页数:8
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