© Columbia University Press
Paper, 360 pages, 3 photographs
ISBN: 978-0-231-12987-9
$25.50
/ £15.00
November, 2004
Cloth, 360 pages, 3 photographs
ISBN: 978-0-231-12986-2
$75.00
/ £44.00
"Castelli has written a masterful book about the way early Christians used martyrdom to construct a collective memory of religious suffering." — Choice
"Castelli succeeds brilliantly in her aim to reveal the way martyrdom constructed a new ideology... that subverted Roman notions." — Kimberly B. Stratton, Biblical Theology Bulletin
"A required reading for anyone who studies and teaches on this problem from the past that remains distressingly present." — Chris Frilingos, Religious Studies Review
"Castelli's stimulating and provocative study is a creative contribution to this flourishing area." — Judith Lieu, Ecclesiastical History
"In probing the collective allure of the ancient atrocity, a story that both unites us and compels us to action or ceremony, Castelli has produced the best study of martyrdom yet, with implications far beyond the world of early Christianity." — David Frankfurter, University of New Hampshire
"Through her meticulous and compelling analysis of the ways that narratives of martyrdom shape the collective memory of early Christians, Castelli succeeds in raising disturbing questions about the grip of the double-edged logic of martyrdom on contemporary political discourse." — Jennifer Glancy, Le Moyne College