Books > Humanities > Religion & beliefs > Non-Christian religions > Pre-Christian European & Mediterranean religions > Ancient Egyptian religion
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ReMembering Osiris - Number, Gender, and the Word in Ancient Egyptian Representational Systems (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R4,242
Discovery Miles 42 420
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ReMembering Osiris - Number, Gender, and the Word in Ancient Egyptian Representational Systems (Hardcover)
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Total price: R4,252
Discovery Miles: 42 520
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The texts and visual arts of ancient Egypt reveal a persistent and
sophisticated engagement with problems of language, the body, and
multiplicity. This innovative book shows how these issues were
represented in ancient Egypt and how Egyptian approaches to them
continue to influence the way we think about them today.
The story of Osiris is one of the central cultural myths of ancient
Egypt, a story of dismemberment and religious passion that also
exemplifies attitudes about personal identity, sexuality, and the
transfer of royal power. It is, moreover, a story of death and the
overcoming of death, and in this it lies at the center of our own
means of engagement with ancient Egypt.
This book focuses on the story of Osiris as it is recorded in
Egyptian texts and memorialized on the walls of temples and tombs.
Since such a focus is attainable only through Egyptian
representational systems, especially hieroglyphs, the book also
engages broader questions of writing and visual representation:
decipherment, controversies about the "ideograph," and the relation
between visual images and writing.
This analysis of Egyptian representation leads to a consideration
of the phallic body and the problem of multiplicity in Egyptian
religion, two nets of Egyptian discourse that, though integrated
into the writing system itself, reach toward broader Egyptian
discourses of gender, subjectivity, piety, and cosmogenesis. The
concluding chapter considers, in specific terms, the question of a
persisting Egyptian legacy in the West, from the Greeks and
Israelites to Augustine, Hegel, and Lacan.
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