Academic literature on the topic 'Sainte (1515-1582)'
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Journal articles on the topic "Sainte (1515-1582)"
O'Neill, Kevin Lewis. "I Want More of You: The Politics of Christian Eroticism in Postwar Guatemala." Comparative Studies in Society and History 52, no. 1 (December 24, 2009): 131–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0010417509990351.
Full textDissertations / Theses on the topic "Sainte (1515-1582)"
Brouillette, André, and André Brouillette. "L'esprit, incarnateur du salut : lecture sotériologique et pneumatologique de l'oeuvre de sainte Thérèse d'Avila." Doctoral thesis, Université Laval, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/24642.
Full textTableau d’honneur de la Faculté des études supérieures et postdoctorales, 2013-2014.
Cerner l’action de l’Esprit en œuvre de salut est une tâche délicate. Une voie d’accès possible est le passage par l’enseignement, entre doctrine et expérience, d’un auteur spirituel, touché par l’Esprit Saint. Ce sera ici sainte Thérèse d’Avila (1515-1582), une grande mystique et fondatrice espagnole. Docteur de l’Église, Thérèse d’Avila (Teresa de Jesús) est connue principalement comme maître d’oraison. Écrivaine, son œuvre littéraire est abondante et marquée du sceau de l’expérience, du souci de sa transmission et d’un désir du salut d’autrui. Réformatrice, elle fonde le premier carmel suivant la règle primitive, San José, puis se lance dans une série de fondations. Dans un premier temps, l’enracinement de cette recherche sotériologique et pneumatologique est celui d’un acte de lecture. L’analyse de deux récits principaux du livre de la Vie (Vida), relatant d’une part le moment charnière dans l’existence de Thérèse où elle reçoit l’inspiration de fonder le monastère de San José et mène à bien ce projet (Vida, chapitres 32 à 36), puis une série de visions qui dessinent un itinéraire de salut (Vida, chapitre 38), permet d’identifier les « lieux » du salut et le caractère dynamique qui s’y fait jour. Dans un deuxième temps, par une traversée de l’ensemble du corpus thérésien, les éléments glanés en des textes circonscrits sont redéployés systématiquement autour de la question de l’Esprit, puis du salut. Se déploie alors un mouvement pneumatologique de salut, centré sur la notion de deshacer (kénose) auquel correspond en l’être humain une dynamique centrée, elle, sur l’incarnation. Le salut s’y présente ultimement comme inhabitation trinitaire. Dans un troisième temps, une synthèse finale ressaisit la proposition thérésienne d’un salut incarnationnel, trinitairement pneumatologique, et anthropologique en en déployant la cohérence interne, l’enracinement biblique et quelques ramifications théologiques contemporaines. En cette dynamique, l’Esprit se révèle pleinement comme l’Incarnateur du salut.
Cerner l’action de l’Esprit en œuvre de salut est une tâche délicate. Une voie d’accès possible est le passage par l’enseignement, entre doctrine et expérience, d’un auteur spirituel, touché par l’Esprit Saint. Ce sera ici sainte Thérèse d’Avila (1515-1582), une grande mystique et fondatrice espagnole. Docteur de l’Église, Thérèse d’Avila (Teresa de Jesús) est connue principalement comme maître d’oraison. Écrivaine, son œuvre littéraire est abondante et marquée du sceau de l’expérience, du souci de sa transmission et d’un désir du salut d’autrui. Réformatrice, elle fonde le premier carmel suivant la règle primitive, San José, puis se lance dans une série de fondations. Dans un premier temps, l’enracinement de cette recherche sotériologique et pneumatologique est celui d’un acte de lecture. L’analyse de deux récits principaux du livre de la Vie (Vida), relatant d’une part le moment charnière dans l’existence de Thérèse où elle reçoit l’inspiration de fonder le monastère de San José et mène à bien ce projet (Vida, chapitres 32 à 36), puis une série de visions qui dessinent un itinéraire de salut (Vida, chapitre 38), permet d’identifier les « lieux » du salut et le caractère dynamique qui s’y fait jour. Dans un deuxième temps, par une traversée de l’ensemble du corpus thérésien, les éléments glanés en des textes circonscrits sont redéployés systématiquement autour de la question de l’Esprit, puis du salut. Se déploie alors un mouvement pneumatologique de salut, centré sur la notion de deshacer (kénose) auquel correspond en l’être humain une dynamique centrée, elle, sur l’incarnation. Le salut s’y présente ultimement comme inhabitation trinitaire. Dans un troisième temps, une synthèse finale ressaisit la proposition thérésienne d’un salut incarnationnel, trinitairement pneumatologique, et anthropologique en en déployant la cohérence interne, l’enracinement biblique et quelques ramifications théologiques contemporaines. En cette dynamique, l’Esprit se révèle pleinement comme l’Incarnateur du salut.
To pinpoint the role of the Holy Spirit in the process of salvation is a delicate task. A potential access point is the teaching—both the doctrine and the experience—of a spiritual author, someone touched by the Spirit. Thus, we selected St. Teresa of Avila (1515-1582) for our research, the great Spanish mystic and foundress. A Doctor of the Church, Teresa of Avila (Teresa de Jesús) is known primarily as a master of prayer. As a writer, her work is prolific and marked by the seal of experience, an interest in its transmission, and a desire for the salvation of humankind. As a Reformer, she founded the first Carmelite monastery—called San José—which followed the primitive Rule, before establishing a series of new monasteries. The first part of this research in soteriology and pneumatology is a close reading of chosen texts. The analysis of two essential narratives of the Autobiography (Vida) identifies the « places » of salvation and reveals its dynamic nature. The first narrative pertains to the pivotal moment in the life of Teresa—the moment when she received the inspiration to establish the monastery of San José and then moved to carry out this project (Vida, chapters 32-36)—, and the second narrative depicts a series of visions that sketch the road of salvation (Vida, chapter 38). In the second part, the elements gleaned from these selected texts are systematically reorganized and developed for specific pneumatological and soteriological issues, with additions from the Complete Works of Teresa. A pneumatological movement of salvation thereby unfolds around the notion of deshacer (kenosis) that corresponds, in anthropological terms, to a movement revolving around the incarnation. Salvation, for Teresa, is ultimately understood as a Trinitarian indwelling (in the human being). In the third part, a final summary will pull together the Teresian proposal for an understanding of salvation: it will show that Teresian salvation is incarnational, pneumatological and anthropological by exploring its internal coherence, its biblical roots and its contemporary theological ramifications. Within these dynamics, the Spirit is fully revealed as the one who incarnates salvation.
To pinpoint the role of the Holy Spirit in the process of salvation is a delicate task. A potential access point is the teaching—both the doctrine and the experience—of a spiritual author, someone touched by the Spirit. Thus, we selected St. Teresa of Avila (1515-1582) for our research, the great Spanish mystic and foundress. A Doctor of the Church, Teresa of Avila (Teresa de Jesús) is known primarily as a master of prayer. As a writer, her work is prolific and marked by the seal of experience, an interest in its transmission, and a desire for the salvation of humankind. As a Reformer, she founded the first Carmelite monastery—called San José—which followed the primitive Rule, before establishing a series of new monasteries. The first part of this research in soteriology and pneumatology is a close reading of chosen texts. The analysis of two essential narratives of the Autobiography (Vida) identifies the « places » of salvation and reveals its dynamic nature. The first narrative pertains to the pivotal moment in the life of Teresa—the moment when she received the inspiration to establish the monastery of San José and then moved to carry out this project (Vida, chapters 32-36)—, and the second narrative depicts a series of visions that sketch the road of salvation (Vida, chapter 38). In the second part, the elements gleaned from these selected texts are systematically reorganized and developed for specific pneumatological and soteriological issues, with additions from the Complete Works of Teresa. A pneumatological movement of salvation thereby unfolds around the notion of deshacer (kenosis) that corresponds, in anthropological terms, to a movement revolving around the incarnation. Salvation, for Teresa, is ultimately understood as a Trinitarian indwelling (in the human being). In the third part, a final summary will pull together the Teresian proposal for an understanding of salvation: it will show that Teresian salvation is incarnational, pneumatological and anthropological by exploring its internal coherence, its biblical roots and its contemporary theological ramifications. Within these dynamics, the Spirit is fully revealed as the one who incarnates salvation.
Alvira, Maria Isabel. "Une conception anthropologique du Siècle d'Or : sainte Thérèse d'Avila." Paris 4, 1990. http://www.theses.fr/1990PA040079.
Full textThis thesis studies from a philosophical point of view the outlook Theresa of Avila had on man throughout all her writings. .
Jude, Véronique. "Libro de la vida de sainte Thérèse d'Avila : communication et réticence." Limoges, 2005. http://www.theses.fr/2005LIMO2014.
Full textMollard, Nicolas. "De l'invocation à l'évocation : sainte Thérèse d'Avila, entre le divin et l'humain dans ses biographies espagnoles, 1882-1982." Caen, 2001. http://www.theses.fr/2001CAEN1335.
Full textSilveira, Rosa Fernando. "Écriture du réel aux frontières de l'expérience mystique : lecture psychanalytique et théologie thérésienne." Thesis, Strasbourg, 2019. http://www.theses.fr/2019STRAC029.
Full textThe real, understood as something impossible to signify, appears to be the point at which philosophers, theologians, and psychoanalysts stumble when they read an account of mystical experience. In fact, mysticismis presented as an impossible real to master through language. Yet, the writing of Teresa of Avila shows that mystical experience, on the contrary, has a close link with the real. To illuminate what of the real is at stake in what, for a mystic, constitutes a singular spiritual experience, we can look to Freud's work on the notion of trace and to the way in which Lacan developed the concept of the real to gain perspective of the mystical theology of Teresa. This dual approach, marked by attention to the boundary between the tangible and the intangible,makes it possible to consider these works as necessary material support for discerning emergent traces of thereal. This allows us to postulate that real can be read as a condition of the possibility for the existence of the mystical experience. Thus, Teresa de Avila will be invoked as both a mystic, one who has lived an experience with God, and as a theologian, one who has also pondered this experience. To be able to understand this lived experience as impossible to represent, we can use the way Freud and Lacan discussions concerning the real,read here as God in mysticism. Yet, Freud considered the spiritual to be part of impulse, whereas Lacan defines the mystical experience in the field of jouissance, inscribing it in the field of signifying logic, of which the real isa product. This leads us to reinterpret the trace inscribed in the body as a dimension of real that resists the symbolic representation of the subject. This relationship between the signifier and the real makes it possible to recognize psychoanalytical and mystical knowledge as a kind of “know-how” of what is impossible. In the case of Teresa of Avila, the real takes the form of the Trinity as truth. To indicate this truth, however, is not enough for her, for what is at stake in this experience is living in union with God who ex-sist in language. In this case,the “know-how” with the real become possibly consequential, even a blessing
Christensen, Linda. "The spiritual life from the perspectives of Islam and Christianity : the stages of the spiritual life in the teachings of al-Ghazālī and St. Teresa of Ávila." Thesis, University of British Columbia, 1987. http://hdl.handle.net/2429/26800.
Full textArts, Faculty of
Classical, Near Eastern and Religious Studies, Department of
Graduate
Ramos, Joyce de Freitas. "Ler, reformar e escrever: teologia mística na expressão feminina de Teresa de Ávila." Pontifícia Universidade Católica de São Paulo, 2017. https://tede2.pucsp.br/handle/handle/20363.
Full textMade available in DSpace on 2017-09-13T11:40:04Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Joyce de Freitas Ramos.pdf: 1243002 bytes, checksum: 4820e515279a2834fa1bb912b5eb4f16 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2017-08-30
Conselho Nacional de Pesquisa e Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico - CNPq
Having the objective of trying to find ways for women to express their selves within the Spanish convents in the XVIth century through the contact with the Mystical Theology, the present work will concentrate on the analyses of sources written by Saint Teresa of Avila. The vast textual production, which guaranteed her the title first Doctor for the Catholic Church, and her reformative movement within the religious life made her a model for female sanctity in her own time and for the following centuries. The study of her work may lead us to realize her place of action and her condition of reader, reformer and writer, all of which are characteristics that seemed unreachable to a woman in Modern Spain
Com o objetivo de tentar encontrar formas de expressão feminina dentro dos conventos espanhóis do século XVI através do contato com a Teologia Mística, o seguinte trabalho se debruçará na análise das fontes escritas por Santa Teresa de Ávila. A ampla produção textual, que lhe garantiu o título de primeira Doutora da Igreja Católica, e seu movimento reformador dentro da vida religiosa a transformaram em um modelo de santidade feminina para sua época e para os séculos que a seguiram. O estudo de sua obra pode nos levar a perceber seu lugar de ação e sua condição de leitora, reformadora e escritora, todas características que pareceriam inalcançáveis para uma mulher na Espanha Moderna
Saint-Saëns, Alain. "La Nostalgie du désert : l'idéal érémitique en Castille au siècle d'or." Toulouse 2, 1990. http://www.theses.fr/1990TOU20009.
Full textThis doctoral thesis tries to understand what could have survived from the original hermitic ideal promoted by the fathers of the desert and afterwards what it could mean in castile during the golden age. In the first part of his thesis, the author defines the hermitic model, basing his study above all on iconographical and literary sources. This model is deeply thought and perfectly codified. In the second part of his thesis, the author shows the place, the role and the sense of this specific hermitic model in a post-tridentine religious contest. Dogmatically ly inspired, the original model receives a real revival from the church after the council of Trent. It actually becomes the best support to help ordinary Christians understand what the sin is and why they need to do penance for their sins. This revisited hermitic ideal is also an important spiritual weapon used by the roman catholic church to struggle against the reformation views. In the third and last part of his work, the author explains how the Spanish society, and all the society from the king the most humble subject used to deal with the hermitic ideal either to emphasize it or to criticize it. Here inquisition trials, pastoral books of visits are the sources used by the author
Duyck, Clément. "Poétique de l'extase (France, 1601-1675)." Thesis, Sorbonne Paris Cité, 2015. http://www.theses.fr/2015USPCA130.
Full textThis dissertation aims to show, through an analysis of a French corpus dating from 1601 to 1675, that ecstasy is used as the condition of the meaning of these speeches. The first part, which focuses on the end of mystical ecstasy, seeks to meet the primary needs of a definition of ecstasy in the 17th century, in order to gather the lexical, notional and historical tools for poetical research. It clarifies the lexicon of ecstasy, shows the results of the transformation of a metaphysical principle into a human phenomenon, and explains the situation of mystical ecstasy facing the discernment of spirits that led to its fall. The second part, which focuses on the narratives of ecstasy, allows to evaluate the poetical consequences of the previous conclusions. It distinguishes indeed between the narrative poetics of two objects located on both ends of the mutations of ecstasy during the century: the visionary ecstasy in the Life of Teresa of Avila, and the invisible ecstasy in the spiritual relations of Claudine Moine. These two kinds of ecstasies are considered as semiotic objects, whose procedures result in a temporal problem: ecstasy stymies the narrative of holiness that Teresa of Avila intends to tell, and hinders the identification between the subject of the story and the subject of the narration in Claudine Moine’s writings. Finally, the third part deals with the enunciation of ecstasy in a corpus that is mainly poetical. It isolates the historical figures that are used to represent this enunciation, specifies how the ecstatic emotions are linked to verbal expression, and determines the impact of the ecstatic subject’s emotional economy on the objective modes of figuration of ecstasy
Sinicropi, Gilles. ""D'oraison et d'action"." Clermont-Ferrand 2, 2010. http://www.theses.fr/2010CLF20001.
Full textBooks on the topic "Sainte (1515-1582)"
Teresa von Avila: Agentin Gottes, 1515-1582 : eine Biographie. München: C.H. Beck, 2014.
Find full textDon, Megan. Meditations with Teresa of Avila: A journey into the sacred. Novato, Calif: New World Library, 2011.
Find full textMystical imagery: Santa Teresa de Jesús and San Juan de la Cruz. New York: P. Lang, 1988.
Find full textSaint and nation: Santiago, Teresa of Avila, and plural identities in early modern Spain. University Park, Pa: Pennsylvania State University Press, 2011.
Find full textThe Avila of Saint Teresa: Religious reform in a sixteenth-century city. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1989.
Find full textThomas. A treasury of quotations on the spiritual life from the writings of St. Thomas Aquinas, Doctor of the Church: Arranged according to the virtues of the Holy Rosary and other spiritual topics. San Francisco: Ignatius Press, 2007.
Find full textAhlgren, Gillian T. W. Teresa of Avila and the politics of sanctity. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1996.
Find full textBook chapters on the topic "Sainte (1515-1582)"
Barclay, Katie, and François Soyer. "Excerpt from the Autobiography of Saint Teresa of Ávila (1515–1582)." In Emotions in Europe 1517–1914, 41–47. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003175384-6.
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