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The eschatological garden: sacred space, time and experience in the monastic cloister garden

The argument of this dissertation is that the garden can be considered a proleptic eschatological landscape outside of time. To prove this argument I pull together strands of philosophical reflections on death, history of religions analysis concerning sacred space and time and monastic spirituality....

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Main Author: Badenhorst,Ursula
Other Authors: Chidester, David
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Religious Studies 2023
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access_status_str Open Access
author Badenhorst,Ursula
author2 Chidester, David
author_browse Badenhorst,Ursula
Chidester, David
author_facet Chidester, David
Badenhorst,Ursula
author_sort Badenhorst,Ursula
collection Thesis
description The argument of this dissertation is that the garden can be considered a proleptic eschatological landscape outside of time. To prove this argument I pull together strands of philosophical reflections on death, history of religions analysis concerning sacred space and time and monastic spirituality. I develop this argument by focusing on the enclosed garden, which has connected with it, in myth and metaphor, abundant meanings concerning life after death in a paradisiacal state of bliss. These meanings also become evident in the physical layout of the garden, which, when analyzing it in terms of substantial and situational definitions of sacred space, becomes a prime example of a sacred space, linked physically and symbolically to an eschatological space. The enclosed garden plays a very important role in monastic spirituality as it is not only associated with the cloister, but also with the Virgin Mary, which both offer the monk a gateway to eternity in Paradise. Physically the enclosed garden becomes the very center of the monastic precinct, offering through a ritual-sensory experience of its spatial qualities an experience which allows the monk a moment of spiritual transcendence. It is also, thus, in this moment, when the monk's physical experience of the garden is woven together with ideas of paradise as an abode of eternity, that the garden becomes a sacred space which can lift him outside of time to experience paradisiacal happiness. This requires a process of hermeneutical interpretation from the monk and the theorist reflecting on this encounter. It is a dialogue between the garden and its interpreters, which leads to the conclusion that an encounter with the sacred never stands in isolation.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2023
publishDateRange 2023
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/38229 The eschatological garden: sacred space, time and experience in the monastic cloister garden Badenhorst,Ursula Chidester, David Religious Studies The argument of this dissertation is that the garden can be considered a proleptic eschatological landscape outside of time. To prove this argument I pull together strands of philosophical reflections on death, history of religions analysis concerning sacred space and time and monastic spirituality. I develop this argument by focusing on the enclosed garden, which has connected with it, in myth and metaphor, abundant meanings concerning life after death in a paradisiacal state of bliss. These meanings also become evident in the physical layout of the garden, which, when analyzing it in terms of substantial and situational definitions of sacred space, becomes a prime example of a sacred space, linked physically and symbolically to an eschatological space. The enclosed garden plays a very important role in monastic spirituality as it is not only associated with the cloister, but also with the Virgin Mary, which both offer the monk a gateway to eternity in Paradise. Physically the enclosed garden becomes the very center of the monastic precinct, offering through a ritual-sensory experience of its spatial qualities an experience which allows the monk a moment of spiritual transcendence. It is also, thus, in this moment, when the monk's physical experience of the garden is woven together with ideas of paradise as an abode of eternity, that the garden becomes a sacred space which can lift him outside of time to experience paradisiacal happiness. This requires a process of hermeneutical interpretation from the monk and the theorist reflecting on this encounter. It is a dialogue between the garden and its interpreters, which leads to the conclusion that an encounter with the sacred never stands in isolation. 2023-08-15T08:41:04Z 2023-08-15T08:41:04Z 2009_ 2023-08-15T08:40:24Z Master Thesis Masters MA http://hdl.handle.net/11427/38229 eng application/pdf Department of Religious Studies Faculty of Humanities
spellingShingle Religious Studies
Badenhorst,Ursula
The eschatological garden: sacred space, time and experience in the monastic cloister garden
thesis_degree_str Master's
title The eschatological garden: sacred space, time and experience in the monastic cloister garden
title_full The eschatological garden: sacred space, time and experience in the monastic cloister garden
title_fullStr The eschatological garden: sacred space, time and experience in the monastic cloister garden
title_full_unstemmed The eschatological garden: sacred space, time and experience in the monastic cloister garden
title_short The eschatological garden: sacred space, time and experience in the monastic cloister garden
title_sort eschatological garden sacred space time and experience in the monastic cloister garden
topic Religious Studies
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/38229
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