The Body Politic(s) of the Jezebel Spirit

‘Third wave’ neo-charismatic evangelical discourses of spiritual warfare envision the world as caught within a struggle between good and evil, in which demonic forces play an active role in shaping the lives of individuals, institutions, and nations. In contemporary American spiritual warfare discou...

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主要作者: O’Donnell, S. Jonathon (Author)
格式: 電子 Article
語言:English
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出版: Brill [2017]
In: Religion & gender
Year: 2017, 卷: 7, 發布: 2, Pages: 240-255
Standardized Subjects / Keyword chains:B Isebel, Israel, Königin / 邪靈 / 福音派運動 / New Apostolic Reformation / Geistliche Kriegführung / Dämonisierung
IxTheo Classification:CB Christian life; spirituality
CC Christianity and Non-Christian religion; Inter-religious relations
CH Christianity and Society
HB Old Testament
KDG Free church
NBE Anthropology
NBH Angelology; demonology
NCA Ethics
Further subjects:B Demons
B Queer Theory
B Colonialism
B Spiritual warfare
B Homophobia
B assemblages
B Evangelicalism
B Jezebel
在線閱讀: Volltext (Verlag)
Volltext (doi)
實物特徵
總結:‘Third wave’ neo-charismatic evangelical discourses of spiritual warfare envision the world as caught within a struggle between good and evil, in which demonic forces play an active role in shaping the lives of individuals, institutions, and nations. In contemporary American spiritual warfare discourse one demonic spirit has gained particular notoriety: the Jezebel spirit. Through a close reading of American spiritual warfare manuals, this article explores constructions of the Jezebel spirit and her place in third wave demonology. Constructed as a spiritual force reigning over an errant United States, the figure of Jezebel facilitates a discursive conflation of personal and social bodies in which the ‘present absences’ of ‘deviant’ (gendered, sexualised, racialised) bodies within the nation become figured as threatening to both national and spiritual survival. Drawing on poststructuralist, postcolonial, and queer theory, the article unpacks how Jezebel is constructed as a figure of feminised absence and multiplicity, whose ‘illegitimate’ possession of ‘deviant’ places and persons renders them as territories of absence that must be restored to normative presence through the reinscription of God’s will.
ISSN:1878-5417
Contains:Enthalten in: Religion & gender
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.18352/rg.10138