“Byzantine thought comes to life in this fabulous book. The authors’ lively writing style and astounding erudition brush away the dust of centuries, revitalizing the texts and images from what they call the ‘long Byzantium.’ And the lives that come to light here are not only human. With care and precision, Arentzen, Burrus, and Peers enable trees to come to the fore as the agents of intellectual, aesthetic, and religious history in their own right.”
— Michael Marder, University of the Basque Country, Vitoria-Gasteiz, Spain
“The quest in this three-faceted book is to give voice to the postmodern tree and its cult, while also discovering and enunciating its Byzantine equivalent. Our awe of the tree, majestic, romanticized, and endangered, is so steeped in the threats of our own era that it claims overweening urgency over every other, yet we know that the premodern era preceded many factors of denaturalization that we are now combatting. That is the book's challenge.”
— Annemarie Weyl Carr, Professor Emerita, Southern Methodist University, USA
“This is a remarkable book that should be of great interest to many scholars and theologians, not only Byzantinists, as it ranges chronologically from the Minoans in the second millennium BC to philosophers at the beginning of the third millennium AD. The entire book propels one into ideas of human-arboreal relations that one had never before contemplated: no reader will turn the last page unchanged in attitude to the natural world.”
— A.R. Littlewood, Professor Emeritus, University of Western Ontario, Canada
“An intriguing, innovative and sympathetic approach to the role of trees—as symbol, metaphor and perceived reality—in late antique and Byzantine Christian thought, this volume turns over a new leaf to tap into a powerful and exciting new current in cultural- and literary-historical research. No longer is the ‘natural’ environment—whether floral or faunal—to be taken at face value.”
— John Haldon, Professor Emeritus, Princeton University, USA
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