Envy, jealousy and rivalry are some of the most universal of human experiences, yet attitudes towards them across different societies and eras show vast cross-cultural variations. This open access book traces the evolution of these emotions from Ancient Greece and Rome to Medieval Christendom, to understand how the diabolical sin of one moral regime could be elevated to a democratic virtue or a tool of self-improvement in the next.Offering a historical panorama of attitudes towards these emotions, Envy, Jealousy and Rivalry in the Ancient and Medieval Mediterranean explores how they were affected by shifts in gender relations, class structure, religious belief and language. Anchored in case studies of ancient and medieval cultures, it offers the first long-range intellectual history of envy and jealousy in the European tradition and reveals how these emotions felt in the distant past.Investigating whether envy and jealousy are indeed two separate emotions or one and the same, it brings insights of the ancient and medieval worlds to bear on questions such as how should we respond to jealousy? What role should envy play in our own relationships? When can these emotions be justified, and when can they not? Challenging our understanding of what is universal and what is culturally specific in the experience of emotions, it provides a new intellectual basis for the study of envy, jealousy and rivalry.The ebook editions of this book are available open access under a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 licence on bloomsburycollections.com. Open access was funded by The Swiss National Science Foundation.
Anthony Ellis is SNSF Researcher in Classics and the History of Religion at University of Bern, Switzerland.
List of FiguresAcknowledgementsAbbreviations and ConventionsPart IIntroducing the Rivalrous EmotionsCh. 1. Introduction Ch. 2. How to Talk About Emotions: Challenges and MethodsCh. 3. Translating EmotionsPart IIGenealogies:‘Jealousy’, ‘Envy’ and ‘Zeal’ as Modern EuropeanismsCh. 4. The Origins of Jealousy (Or: Are Envy and Jealousy ‘Two Emotions’?)Ch. 5. The Origins of Zeal: What Has It Got To Do With Jealousy?Part IIIJealousy, Envy and Zeal Around the Ancient Mediterranean:How Living Languages of the Past Talked About the Rivalrous EmotionsCh. 6. Malign Yet Divine: Jealousy in the Hebrew BibleCh. 7. Getting Even under Democracy and Tyranny: Rivalry and Competition in Ancient GreeceCh. 8. How Should a Monotheist Feel? New Emotional Communities in the Greek WorldCh. 9. Invidious Comparisons: Jealousy and Indignation in the Roman RepublicCh. 10. Jealousy in Latin Christianity: Between Diabolical Envy and Divine ZealotryCh. 11. Jealousy, Envy and Religious Strife in the Emirate of CórdobaPart IVThe Theory of Jealousy and Envy:How Philosophers Talked About the Rivalrous EmotionsCh. 12. Rival Theories: Pathematological Interventions from the Socratics to DescartesCh. 13. EpilogueBibliographyIndex of SubjectsIndex of Ancient and Medieval Sources