The Holy Family and Its Legacy: Religious Imagination from the Gospels to Star Wars

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Columbia University Press, 2003 - Religion - 208 pages

Why do biblical themes continue to have such an impact on the popular imagination? Why do Mary-like mothers and Jesus-like sons play such a prominent role not only in the late Middle Ages and the Reformation but also in the Enlightenment; the nineteenth century, with its faith in science; and even our time, in such movies as The Terminator and the Star Wars saga--to the extent that we can count them among Western society's leading cultural archetypes? And what does the figure of the father-God reveal about the social and familial institutions of male-dominated society?

In this provocative and engaging book, Albrecht Koschorke suggests that the story of the Holy Family has become a cultural code embedded in secular society. The Western nuclear family consists of the Christian prototype of mother, father, and child. Thus the Holy Family has come to be a model for modern family dynamics. The holy child stands at the center of centuries of art history, just as the child stands at the center of parental attention today. Similarly, the roles of modern women and men provide dramatic parallels to the surrogate mother Mary and to Joseph, a proxy for the absent father. But as the position of the father in Christianity remains ambiguous, Koschorke argues, the Holy Family model actually disrupts the nuclear "ideal," with reverberations throughout Western culture, including art, literature, film, popular culture, and political ideology. The anomalies of the Christian nativity--a present but nonbiological father and an absent spiritual father, for example--support the ideology of the state as a powerful and patriarchal determinant of society.

Ranging over two millennia of history and culture, Koschorke deftly contrasts the cultural archetype of the Holy Family with the theories of Freud and Weber and with the literary works of Rousseau, Kleist, and others in an exploration that illuminates issues of historical, religious, artistic, psychological, and cultural significance.

 

Contents

Around the Year Zero
3
a Faith and Code
5
Jesus and His Fathers
8
Mary and the Trinity
11
From the Jewish Birth Family to the Christian Destination Family
13
The Man Joseph and Monotheistic Religion
17
The MotherSon Axis
28
The Sacred Marriage
40
The Question of Power
86
Consequences
97
On the Road to Becoming the Religion of the Empire
99
The Churchs Marriage Policy in the Middle Ages
103
The Protestant Holy Family
115
The Return of Joseph
135
Joseph Abelard SaintPreux
140
Holy Family Bourgeois Family
150

The FatherSon Axis
48
The Dissolution of Distinctions
54
Theories
61
The Family Novel of Religions
63
Beyond Gender
79
Freuds Coup
164
Remnant Families in the Welfare State
175
Theology and Family in George Lucass Star Wars
178
Notes
189
Copyright

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About the author (2003)

Albrecht Koschorke is professor of German at the University of Konstanz and is a project director at the Research Center for Literary Studies in Berlin. He has published four previous books in German, including Die Geschichte des Horizonts and Körperströme und Schriftverkehr.

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