Dressing the part: Early Christian identity North Africa, 100-200 CE

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Publication Type honors thesis
School or College College of Humanities
Department Religious Studies
Faculty Mentor Isabel Moreira
Creator Markham, Airyana
Title Dressing the part: Early Christian identity North Africa, 100-200 CE
Year graduated 2014
Date 2014-12
Description The study of early Christian identity in the second-third centuries is problematic. This is because there is a paucity of material evidence and assigning a religious affiliation to that evidence is highly contested. For this reason, early Christian identity is often viewed by scholars in a distinct, binary opposition to non-Christian identity based on their reading of limited, largely clerical, historical texts. Recent scholars, particularly Eric Rebillard, have started to challenge these discursive structures regarding Christian markers in this era. My thesis explores clothing as one of those identity markers by examining, in Part I, the role of dress in late antiquity. By using Roger Brubaker's theory from Ethnicity without groups and Eric Rebillard's "identity theory," I analyze the difficulties that arise from using sharply divided groups as the basic units of social analysis when attempting to construct an early Christian identity. Also in this thesis, I argue that the emergence of a Christian rhetoric on dress and burial in the second-third century is an attempt by early church fathers to construct a Christian identity that is not otherwise evident. In Part II, I analyze religious identity in burials by examining the material evidence from the al- Fayoum, Egypt area. Particular attention is given to the Brigham Young University Egypt Excavation Project el-Gamous site and their claims to have exhumed the earliest extant Christian burials. My examination of the material evidence from these excavations prompts me to claim that clothing is not an identity marker for Christians in the secondthird centuries. My intervention challenges archaeologists who assume that Christians wore clothing that identified them and that this distinctive clothing can be seen in the grave. Furthermore, by looking specifically at clothing, my research proposes that oftcited Christian writings from the second-third centuries are rhetorical attempts to construct a Christian identity and cannot be shown to have significant material evidence. Therefore, my claim that clothing is not an identifier for Christian identity also challenges the notion that Christians were always distinct from their surrounding cultures.
Type Text
Publisher University of Utah
Subject Clothing and dress -- Religious aspects -- Christianity; Identification (Religion); Christian life -- History -- Early church, ca. 30-600; Church history -- Primitive and early church, ca. 30-600
Language eng
Rights Management Copyright © Airyana Markham 2014
Format Medium application/pdf
Format Extent 1,917,563 bytes
Identifier etd3/id/3593
Permissions Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6fr3sq6
ARK ark:/87278/s6dz3hm9
Setname ir_htoa
ID 197145
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6dz3hm9