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Books > Humanities > Religion & beliefs > Non-Christian religions > Pre-Christian European & Mediterranean religions > General
This book is the first attempt that has ever been made to give a
comprehensive account of the religious life of ancient Athens. The
city's many festivals are discussed in detail, with attention to
recent anthropological theory; so too, for instance, are the cults
of households and of smaller
groups, the role of religious practice and argumentation in public
life, the authority of priests, the activities of religious
professionals such as seers and priestesses, magic, the place of
theatrical representations of the gods within public attitudes to
the divine. A long final section considers
the sphere of activity of the various gods, and takes Athens as a
uniquely detailed test case for the structuralist approach to
polytheism. The work is a synchronic, thematically organized
complement (though designed to be read independently) to the same
author's Athenian Religion: A History (OUP,
1996).
In Ancient Egypt: State and Society, Alan B. Lloyd attempts to
define, analyse, and evaluate the institutional and ideological
systems which empowered and sustained one of the most successful
civilizations of the ancient world for a period in excess of three
and a half millennia. The volume adopts the premise that all
societies are the product of a continuous dialogue with their
physical context - understood in the broadest sense - and that, in
order to achieve a successful symbiosis with this context, they
develop an interlocking set of systems, defined by historians,
archaeologists, and anthropologists as culture. Culture, therefore,
can be described as the sum total of the methods employed by a
group of human beings to achieve some measure of control over their
environment. Covering the entirety of the civilization, and
featuring a large number of up-to-date translations of original
Egyptian texts, Ancient Egypt focuses on the main aspects of
Egyptian culture which gave the society its particular character,
and endeavours to establish what allowed the Egyptians to maintain
that character for an extraordinary length of time, despite
enduring cultural shock of many different kinds.
This is a complete edition, with prolegomena, translation, and
commentary of the first, "philosophical" part of Philodemus' De
Pietate, preserved in papyri. Introducing a new method for
reconstructing the fragmented papyrus rolls recovered from
Herculaneum, this is the first edition based on the papyri
themselves (where they still exist), rather than on faulty
reproductions, and the first edition to bring together fragments
hitherto thought to be from different rolls. It will also be the
first translation of the work into any language. An innovative
format presents on facing pages the technical details of the
papyrus, and a conventional, continuous text with interpretive
notes. The work itself comprises a polemical treatise on the gods,
mythography, and religion, presenting a defence of Epicurus's view
of religion as an outgrowth of cultural history, and a
philosophical rationale for participation in traditional cult
practices in order to further social cohesion.
Practiced today by more than 500 million adherents, Buddhism
emerged from India between the sixth and fourth centuries BCE.
Based around the original teachings of the Buddha, key texts
emerged to promote a true understanding of Buddhist ethics and
spiritual practices. The Buddhist traditions created a vast body of
mythological literature, much of it focused on the life of the
Buddha. For example, the 550 Jataka Tales tell of Buddha's early
life and renunciation, as well as his previous human and animal
incarnations. The stories also tell of Gautama Buddha's family,
such as his mother Mara, and her dream of a white elephant
preceding his birth; as well as his cousin, Devadatta, a disciple
monk who rebelled against Buddha and tried to kill him. Buddhist
literature includes numerous parables - such as the Turtle Who
Couldn't Stop Talking - as well as recounting scenes from the
Indian epic the Ramayana. History and myth intermingle in texts
such as Ashokavadana, where the Mauryan emperor Ashoka is portrayed
as a model of Buddhist kingship. Illustrated with 120 photographs
and artworks, Buddhist Myths is an accessible, engaging and highly
informative exploration of the fascinating mythology underlying one
of the world's oldest and most influential religions.
Examining the theme of child sacrifice as a psychological
challenge, this book applies a unique approach to religious ideas
by looking at beliefs and practices that are considered deviant,
but also make up part of mainstream religious discourse in Judaism,
Islam, and Christianity. Ancient religious mythology, which
survives through living traditions and transmitted narratives,
rituals, and writings, is filled with violent stories, often
involving the targeting of children as ritual victims. Christianity
offers Abraham's sacrifice and assures us that the "only begotten
son" has died, and then been resurrected. This version of the
sacrifice myth has dominated the West. It is celebrated in an act
of fantasy cannibalism, in which the believers share the divine
son's flesh and blood. This book makes the connection between
Satanism stories in the 1980s, the Blood Libel in Europe, The
Eucharist, and Eastern Mediterranean narratives of child sacrifice.
First revealed by a Tibetan monk in the 14th century, Bardo Thodol
("Great Liberation upon Hearing in the Intermediate State") - known
more commonly as The Tibetan Book of the Dead - describes the
experience of human consciousness in the bardo, the interval
between death and the next rebirth in the cycle of death and
rebirth. The teachings are designed to help the dying regain
clarity of awareness at the moment of death, and by doing so
achieve enlightened liberation. Popular throughout the world since
the 1960s and overwhelmingly the best-known Buddhist text in the
West, this classic translation by Kazi Dawa Samdup is divided into
21 chapters, with sections on the chikhai bardo, or the clear light
seen at the moment of death; choenyid bardo, or karmic apparitions;
the wisdom of peaceful deities, Buddhas and Bodhisattvas; the 58
flame-enhaloed, wrathful, blood-drinking deities; the judgement of
those who the dying has known in life through the "mirror of
karma"; and the process of rebirth. The text also includes chapters
on the signs of death and rituals to undertake for the dying.
Presented in a high-quality Chinese-bound format with accompanying
illustrations, The Tibetan Book of the Dead is an ideal resource of
ancient wisdom for anyone interested in Tibetan Buddhist notions of
death and the path to enlightenment.
Gorgeous Collector's Edition. India, one of the great, ancient
civilizations, spawned a fascinating canon of myths and legends.
With multiple gods, and a riot of colour and character, this
fantastic new book, Indian Myths & Legends, explores the themes
and landscapes that created the tales, and reveals the boundless
energy that brought us the Ramayana and the Mahabharata, retelling
the stories of Krishna, Buddha and Shiva, and some of the many
different versions of creation. Flame Tree Collector's Editions
present the foundations of speculative fiction, authors, myths and
tales without which the imaginative literature of the twentieth
century would not exist, bringing the best, most influential and
most fascinating works into a striking and collectable library.
Each book features a new introduction and a Glossary of Terms.
A Feminist Mythology takes us on a poetic journey through the
canonical myths of femininity, testing them from the point of view
of our modern condition. A myth is not an object, but rather a
process, one that Chiara Bottici practises by exploring different
variants of the myth of "womanhood" through first- and third-person
prose and poetry. We follow a series of myths that morph into each
other, disclosing ways of being woman that question inherited
patriarchal orders. In this metamorphic world, story-telling is not
just a mix of narrative, philosophical dialogues and metaphysical
theorizing: it is a current that traverses all of them by
overflowing the boundaries it encounters. In doing so, A Feminist
Mythology proposes an alternative writing style that recovers
ancient philosophical and literary traditions from the pre-Socratic
philosophers and Ovid's Metamorphoses to the philosophical novellas
and feminist experimental writings of the last century.
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Deliverance
(Hardcover)
Henry Osborn Taylor
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R1,400
R1,152
Discovery Miles 11 520
Save R248 (18%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Moving away from focusing on wisdom as a literary genre, this book
delves into the lived, embodied and formative dimensions of wisdom
as they are delineated in Jewish sources from the Persian,
Hellenistic and early Roman eras. Considering a diverse body of
texts beyond later canonical boundaries, the book demonstrates that
wisdom features not as an abstract quality, but as something to be
performed and exercised at both the individual and community level.
The analysis specifically concentrates on notions of a 'wise'
person, including the rise of the sage as an exemplary figure. It
also looks at how ancestral figures and contemporary teachers are
imagined to manifest and practice wisdom, and considers communal
portraits of a wise and virtuous life. In so doing, the author
demonstrates that the previous focus on wisdom as a category of
literature has overshadowed significant questions related to
wisdom, behaviour and social life. Jewish wisdom is also
contextualized in relation to its wider ancient Mediterranean
milieu, making the book valuable for biblical scholars,
classicists, scholars of religion and the ancient Near East and
theologians.
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