Gender, sex, and emotion the Moravian litany of the wounds /
Abstract (Summary)
GENDER, SEX, AND EMOTION: THE MORAVIAN LITANY OF THE WOUNDS
by Jason Leto
The Moravians, a small Pietist sect led by the charismatic Count Nicholaus Ludwig von
Zinzendorf, established a mission outpost in North America in the early 1740’s. Driven by a
strange religious impulse, the Moravians were some of the most successful Protestant
missionaries of the eighteenth century. One key part of their religious practice from the 1740’s to
the 1760’s was the recitation, performance, and language of the Litany of the Wounds of Christ.
In this graphic and bloody text, believers beg to lie in and taste the gruesome wounds of Christ.
This thesis offers an interpretation of the Litany that understands it in the context of a uniquely
Moravian sense of self, which hinges on Moravian emotional practice stimulated by the Litany.
The Moravian European background, Zinzendorf’s biography, and Moravian missionary efforts,
are all explored in the context of attempting to understand the context of the litany and its uses.
GENDER, SEX, AND EMOTION: THE MORAVIAN LITANY OF THE WOUNDS
A Thesis
Submitted to the
Faculty of Miami University
in partial fulfillment of
the requirements for the degree of
Master of Arts
Department of Comparative Religion
by Jason Leto
Miami University
Oxford, Ohio
2006
Advisor ________________________________
(Peter W. Williams)
Reader _________________________________
(Liz Wilson)
Reader __________________________________
(Lisa J. Poirier)
Bibliographical Information:
Advisor:
School:Miami University
School Location:USA - Ohio
Source Type:Master's Thesis
Keywords:moravian church eighteenth century evangelicalism emotion and religion emotions
ISBN:
Date of Publication: