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Title
Antecedents and remnants of apocalyptic Christianity: an iconology of death
Description
La Santa Muerte is a folk saint depicted as a female Grim Reaper in Mexico and the Southwestern United States. The Grim Reaper, as an iconic representation of death, was derived from the Angel of Death found in pseudepigrapha and apocalyptic writings of Jewish and early Christian writers. The Angel of Death arose from images and practices in pre-Christian Europe and throughout the Mediterranean region. Images taken from Revelation were used to console the survivors of the Black Death in Western Europe and produced a material culture that taught the Christian notion of dying well. The combination of the scythe (used in the eschatological harvest), the black cowl (worn by medieval priests and monks officiating at funerals), and the skeleton (as the physical body of the deceased) are a series of apocalyptic Christian referents that form a metonymical composite referred to as the Grim Reaper.
In medieval Iberian Dances of Death, the Grim Reaper was depicted as female, an unyielding social leveler, and an important participant in the Last Judgment. Personalized Death became associated with healing, renewal, magic, and binding, as apocalyptic Christianity blended with the Christian cult of the saints and the Virgin Mary during the Reconquista and the colonization of Mesoamerica. Utilizing secondary historical sources, metonymy, and iconology this Master of Arts thesis posits that the La Santa Muerte image resulted from a long historical interaction of Greek, Roman, Jewish, Visogothic, Islamic, and Christian death imagery leading up to the colonization of Mesoamerica.
In medieval Iberian Dances of Death, the Grim Reaper was depicted as female, an unyielding social leveler, and an important participant in the Last Judgment. Personalized Death became associated with healing, renewal, magic, and binding, as apocalyptic Christianity blended with the Christian cult of the saints and the Virgin Mary during the Reconquista and the colonization of Mesoamerica. Utilizing secondary historical sources, metonymy, and iconology this Master of Arts thesis posits that the La Santa Muerte image resulted from a long historical interaction of Greek, Roman, Jewish, Visogothic, Islamic, and Christian death imagery leading up to the colonization of Mesoamerica.
Date Created
2014
Contributors
- Breault, Eric (Author)
- Astor-Aguilera, Miguel A (Thesis advisor)
- Gereboff, Joel (Committee member)
- Maupin, Jonathan (Committee member)
- Arizona State University (Publisher)
Topical Subject
- religion
- Comparative religion
- Religious history
- Apocalypse
- death
- folk
- Grim Reaper
- iconography
- La Santa Muerte
- Death (Personification)
- Death--Symbolic aspects--Mexico.
- death
- Death--Symbolic aspects--Southwest, New.
- death
- Apocalyptic art--Mexico.
- Apocalyptic art
- Apocalyptic art--Southwest, New.
- Apocalyptic art
Resource Type
Extent
v,73 pages
Language
eng
Copyright Statement
In Copyright
Primary Member of
Peer-reviewed
No
Open Access
No
Handle
https://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.26880
Statement of Responsibility
by Eric Bruce Breault
Description Source
Viewed on June 23, 2020
Level of coding
full
Note
thesis
Partial requirement for: M.A., Arizona State University, 2014
bibliography
Includes bibliographical references
Field of study: Religion
System Created
- 2014-12-01 07:07:35
System Modified
- 2021-08-30 01:31:59
- 3 years 2 months ago
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