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The Narcissus and the Pomegranate - An Archaeology of the ""Homeric Hymn to Demeter (Hardcover)
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The Narcissus and the Pomegranate - An Archaeology of the ""Homeric Hymn to Demeter (Hardcover)
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Offering a new understanding of the "Hymn to Demeter, " Ann Suter
provides an analysis of methodological approaches, reconciling the
seemingly disparate pieces of the complex narrative of the hymn.
Examining evidence from other versions of the hymn's myths, as well
as from Greek religion, linguistics, and archaeology, she lends a
new understanding to the relationships among the hymn's
personages--Persephone, Demeter, Hades, and Zeus--as they developed
and crystallized, providing a new chronology for the cults of
Demeter and Persephone at Eleusis.
The author analyzes the traditional language of the hymn and
Persephone's retelling of her story to Demeter, arguing that the
hymn involves an earlier tale of Demeter and Persephone that
predates the seventh century. Suter uses anthropological
applications to illustrate that the story of Persephone's abduction
does not reflect a female initiation rite into adulthood, as has
been argued, but rather an "hieros gamos." These methodologies
point to the conclusion that Persephone was once a powerful goddess
in her own right, independent of Hades and of Demeter as well. To
test the accuracy of these possibilities, the book next examines
evidence from outside the hymn. Other versions of the two myths in
the hymn support the idea that these myths--Persephone's abduction
and Demeter's nursing of Demophoon--were once separate and were
late combined to create a new story. Evidence from the chief
archaeological sites, from vase painting and other artistic forms
is provided to enhance the argument. Thus the evidence from outside
the hymn supports the conclusions of the textual analyses, giving
surprising substantiation that the hymn itself commemorates the
early days of the worship of the goddesses as a mother/daughter
pair.
This book will be of particular interest to scholars of religious
history, art history, archaeology, and literature. It is also
accessible to the general reader interested in Greek literature,
myths, and religion.
Ann Suter is Associate Professor of Classical Studies, University
of Rhode Island.
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