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Andrew Jacobs (Scripps College), "Imperial Lives: St. Epiphanius of Salamis and Religious Anxieties"

Portrait of Andrew Jacobs
March 27, 2014
All Day
165 Thompson Library

Professor Andrew Jacobs will deliver the sixth and final lecture in the 2013-2014 At-Large Lectures on Religion series. He is Professor of Religious Studies at Scripps College. His lecture, like all others in the Center for the Study of Religion-sponsored series, is free and open to all. There will be a brief question-and-answer session and a reception following the lecture.

In this talk, Jacobs considers the cultural function of saints' lives by comparing two texts about a fourth-century bishop named Epiphanius. The first, written in Greek in the fifth century, portrays Epiphanius as a wonder-working monk. The second, written in English in the Victorian era, portrays Epiphanius as a soulful, Catholic renunciant and scholar. Both lives also contend that Epiphanius was born Jewish and tangled with the forces of the Roman Empire. How does the life of a saint, in these two imperial contexts, mediate questions about power, politics, and the problem of religious difference?