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Available From UC Press
Ministries of Song
Women's Voices in Ancient Syriac Christianity
A free ebook version of this title is available through Luminos, University of California Press’s Open Access publishing program. Visit www.luminosoa.org to learn more.
Ministries of Song is a tour-de-force study of the power of women’s ritual singing in late antique Syriac Christianity. Beyond the familiar roles of female saints and nobles, Syriac churches cultivated a flourishing but often-overlooked tradition of women’s sacred song. Their music comes alive as Susan Ashbrook Harvey uncovers the ways these now-nameless women performed a boldly sung teaching ministry and invited congregations to respond aloud. By exploring their ritual agency, Harvey shows how these choirs helped to shape the formative ethical and moral lives of their congregations and communities. Women’s voices both real and imagined enriched the ritual and devotional lives of Syriac Christians daily and weekly, on ecclesial and civic special occasions, in sorrow or joy, with authoritative theological significance and social and political resonance. Arguing for the importance of liturgy as social history, Harvey shows us how and why women’s voices mattered for ancient Syriac Christianity and why they matter still.
Ministries of Song is a tour-de-force study of the power of women’s ritual singing in late antique Syriac Christianity. Beyond the familiar roles of female saints and nobles, Syriac churches cultivated a flourishing but often-overlooked tradition of women’s sacred song. Their music comes alive as Susan Ashbrook Harvey uncovers the ways these now-nameless women performed a boldly sung teaching ministry and invited congregations to respond aloud. By exploring their ritual agency, Harvey shows how these choirs helped to shape the formative ethical and moral lives of their congregations and communities. Women’s voices both real and imagined enriched the ritual and devotional lives of Syriac Christians daily and weekly, on ecclesial and civic special occasions, in sorrow or joy, with authoritative theological significance and social and political resonance. Arguing for the importance of liturgy as social history, Harvey shows us how and why women’s voices mattered for ancient Syriac Christianity and why they matter still.
Susan Ashbrook Harvey is the Willard Prescott and Annie McClelland Smith Professor of Religion and History at Brown University, specializing in Syriac and Greek Christianity of the late antique and Byzantine eras. She is author of Scenting Salvation: Ancient Christianity and the Olfactory Imagination.
"This rich and compelling book offers the first focused history of Syriac women's choirs in late antiquity and beyond. Piecing together portraits of female characters in liturgical poetry, and reflecting with creativity and sophistication on the relationship between liturgy, theology, and social history, this book gives humane voice to an institution—the Syriac Christian women's choir—that has been overlooked for too long."—Jeffrey Wickes, Associate Professor of Theology, University of Notre Dame
"An enthralling guide to the vitality of women's choirs and their unique portrayals of storied biblical women in ancient Syriac Christian worship. Through her unparalleled gifts as a storyteller and historian, Susan Ashbrook Harvey reveals how drama and devotion intertwine in these dynamic ritual settings. A seismic achievement!"—Georgia Frank, Professor of Religious Pluralism, Colgate University
"An enthralling guide to the vitality of women's choirs and their unique portrayals of storied biblical women in ancient Syriac Christian worship. Through her unparalleled gifts as a storyteller and historian, Susan Ashbrook Harvey reveals how drama and devotion intertwine in these dynamic ritual settings. A seismic achievement!"—Georgia Frank, Professor of Religious Pluralism, Colgate University