Pain and epiphany: Julian of Norwich' Revelations of Divine Love as Pathography
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/18216Date
2019-10-31Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Dahl Hambro, CathinkaAbstract
This article discusses the medieval English mystic Julian of Norwich’s autobiographical text Revelations of Divine Love and the significance of physical pain in Julian’s holy visions. Applying Anne H. Hawkins’ idea of the ‘myth of rebirth’, the article argues that although Julian’s work is not a narrative about illness as such, it may nevertheless be read as a medieval pathography or as a representative for a pre-stage genre of the modern pathography. Moreover, by applying theories on the phenomenology of pain, it discusses whether we may learn something today from the way in which medieval religious writers found a theological meaning in pain and whether painful experiences may help develop positive character traits.
Description
Published version available at: https://tidsskrift.dk/sygdomogsamfund/article/view/116955
Publisher
Medicinsk Antropologisk ForumCitation
Dahl Hambro C. Pain and epiphany: Julian of Norwich' Revelations of Divine Love as Pathography. Tidsskrift for forskning i sygdom og samfund. 2019(31):27-43Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
Copyright 2019 The Author(s)