The Image of the Stranger in the Writings of Plato, Saadi, Ibn Bajja, Suhrawardi

  • Silviu Lupașcu “Dunarea de Jos“ University of Galati
Keywords: image of the stranger, Hellenistic Gnosticism, Towering figures

Abstract

This essay epitomizes the history of an idea: the stranger. The almost inexhaustible meanings of the word allowed the author to trace a fascinating trajectory of this notion within the history of culture and the history of ideas. The archaic significance defines the stranger in the political and legal context of the Greek polis, a status which is described by Plato in The Laws. The system of thought of the Hellenistic Gnosticism incorporates the image of the stranger as a symbol revealing the traumas and beatitudes of the human soul on the way towards redemption. In this respect, The Hymn of the Pearl stands as a masterpiece of the Gnostic literature. Furthermore, the symbol of the stranger was borrowed into the spiritual realm of philosophical and mystical Islam, in the Middle Ages. Towering figures of Sufi wisdom, such as Ibn Bajja, Saadi and Suhrawardi, used the image of the stranger in order to create priceless literary and religious brilliance.

Author Biography

Silviu Lupașcu, “Dunarea de Jos“ University of Galati

Lecturer, Ph.D., History Department, The Lower Danube University of Galaţi (Romania)

Published
2004-11-30
How to Cite
Lupașcu, S. (2004). The Image of the Stranger in the Writings of Plato, Saadi, Ibn Bajja, Suhrawardi. The Annals of "Dunarea De Jos" University of Galati. Fascicle XIX, History, 3, 181-187. Retrieved from https://www.gup.ugal.ro/ugaljournals/index.php/history/article/view/921
Section
ISTORIA CULTURII

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