ABSTRACT

This book examines the method of meditative reading encouraged by John Cassian (c. 360-435) in his ascetic writings, the bulk of which are fictive dialogues that purportedly record the instruction he had received from Egyptial Christian monks. This instruction was at its core an interactive experience, depending upon both the discernment of the master and diligent application of instruction by the student. Driver examines Cassian's understanding of the act of reading and suggests the implications of this for Cassian's monastic teaching and it interprets Cassian's method of reading in light of contemporary discussions of reading and the self.

chapter |9 pages

Introduction

chapter |10 pages

John Cassian

chapter |16 pages

Implications for Praxis

A Reconsideration of the Solitary Life

chapter |14 pages

Implications for Theoria

Reading, Interiority and the Transfiguration of the Self