Mary Magdalene: Women, the Church, and the Great Deception
By (Author) Adriana Valerio
Translated by Wendy Wheatley
Europa Editions (UK) Ltd
Europa Compass
28th September 2021
22nd July 2021
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Ancient history
226.092
Paperback
128
Width 120mm, Height 180mm
Favourite disciple, influential woman, true believer and follower of Jesus: how do we see Mary Magdalene today Witness to Jesus' crucifixion and his burial, the first to announce the resurrection, she is without a doubt the most recognizable of the gospels' female figures, a central character in Christianity's foundational story. But centuries of alteration and resizing, of merging several female figures into one, have erased Mary Madgalene's apostolic role and left us with a misrepresentation. They delivered the figure of a quintessential repentant sinner, one in whom sensual beauty and mortification of the body are combined.
When we reflect on the "Magdalene case", delving into the folds of history and the arts, and removing misunderstandings and manipulations, we rediscover the crucial roles women have always held within the heart of Christianity, despite their stories often going untold. Adriana Valerio's engrossing retelling of Magdalene's story, founded as it is in historical fact, is an unmissable opportunity to reclaim such roles in a church that remains largely patriarchal to the present day.
We are all Mary Magdalene.
Adriana Valerios brilliant Mary Magdalene: Women, the Church and the Great Deception is essential reading for anyone who cares about Church history and gender equality, rigorously condensing a wealth of feminist research into a concise volume for a wide readership. Wendy Wheatleys beautiful translation captures Valerios passionate cadence, rendering her elegantly captivating Italian prose into English without flattening its nuances, nor diluting its urgency... In the wake of the #MeToo movement and debates surrounding sex work, Valerios investigation speaks to our times with impressive relevance. * Reading in Translation *
Adriana Valerio is a historian and theologian. For over thirty years, since she became one of the first women in Italy to obtain a theology degree, she has devoted herself to the critical interpretation of the role of women within the history of Christianity. She is the author of many essays on the subject and an internationally recognised scholar.
Wendy Wheatley was born in Hartford, Connecticut. After spending her formative years in The Netherlands and Belgium, she moved to Milan in 1986 to work as a designer with the architect Ettore Sottsass. His request to translate his writings blossomed into a career compatible with raising a family.