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The Return of the Dead - Ghosts, Ancestors, and the Transparent Veil of the Pagan Mind (Paperback)
Loot Price: R480
Discovery Miles 4 800
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The Return of the Dead - Ghosts, Ancestors, and the Transparent Veil of the Pagan Mind (Paperback)
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Was R706
Loot Price R480
Discovery Miles 4 800
You Save R226 (32%)
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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How the ghost stories of pagan times reveal the seamless union
existing between the world of the living and the afterlife
- Demonstrates how Medieval Christianity transformed the more
corporeal ghost encountered in pagan cultures with the disembodied
form known today
- Explains how the returning dead were once viewed as either
troublemakers or guarantors of the social order
The impermeable border the modern world sees existing between the
world of the living and the afterlife was not visible to our
ancestors. The dead could--and did--cross back and forth at will.
The pagan mind had no fear of death, but some of the dead were
definitely to be dreaded: those who failed to go peacefully into
the afterlife but remained on this side in order to right a wrong
that had befallen them personally or to ensure that the law
promoted by the ancestors was being respected. But these dead
individuals were a far cry from the amorphous ectoplasm that is
featured in modern ghost stories. These earlier visitors from
beyond the grave--known as revenants--slept, ate, and fought like
men, even when, like Klaufi of the "Svarfdaela Saga," they carried
their heads in their arms.
Revenants were part of the ancestor worship prevalent in the pagan
world and still practiced in indigenous cultures such as the Fang
and Kota of equatorial Africa, among others. The Church, eager to
supplant this familial faith with its own, engineered the
transformation of the corporeal revenant into the disembodied ghost
of modern times, which could then be easily discounted as a figment
of the imagination or the work of the devil. The sanctified grounds
of the church cemetery replaced the burial mounds on the family
farm, where the ancestors remained as an integral part of the
living community. This exile to the formal graveyard, ironically
enough, has contributed to the great loss of the sacred that
characterizes the modern world.
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