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The Invention of Dancing ManiaFrankish Christianity, Platonic Cosmology and Bodily Expressions in Sacred SpaceJohann Wolfgang Goethe-University Frankfurt am Main, Germany. E-mail: g.rohmann{at}em.uni-frankfurt.de Medieval dancing mania has until recently remained an enigma in medical and religious history. This is because scholars tend to view it as an invariable medical syndrome instead of examining it as an example of the historicity of illness as semantic network. Taking the latter approach allows for grasping the phenomenon as a form of insanity specific to the Rhine basin of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, though one whose roots can be traced to the early medieval reception of platonic cosmology and theurgy. This paper examines the legend of the Kölbigk dancers in the above perspective and establishes that its chief motif goes back to Sulpicius Severus reception of Iamblichus de mysteriis. Thus, dancing mania appears to have been a form of insanity, indeed, but one constructed through religious narratives.
The Medieval History Journal, Vol. 12, No. 1,
13-45 (2009) |
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