Anbieter: WorldofBooks, Goring-By-Sea, WS, Vereinigtes Königreich
EUR 11,38
Anzahl: 2 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbHardback. Zustand: Very Good. The book has been read, but is in excellent condition. Pages are intact and not marred by notes or highlighting. The spine remains undamaged.
Sprache: Englisch
Verlag: John Murray Publishers Ltd, 1997
ISBN 10: 0719556260 ISBN 13: 9780719556265
Anbieter: Sell Books, Elland, YORKS, Vereinigtes Königreich
EUR 11,37
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
In den Warenkorbhardcover. Zustand: Good. Our good condition books are generally good for reading but not for gifting or collecting. They could have imperfections such as creasing, fanning, inscriptions, margin notes, yellowing, staining on edge or cover or pages, bumps, scuffs, etc etc (sometimes multiple of these). It's a wide category that encompasses anything that isn't almost-new down to anything that is slightly better than poor. We would NOT recommend gifting Good books - these should be considered reading copies. Our books are dispatched from a Yorkshire former cotton mill. We list via barcode/ISBN so please note that the images are stock images and may not be the exact copy you receive, furthermore the details about edition and year might not be accurate as many publishers reuse the same ISBN for multiple editions and as we simply scan a barcode or enter an ISBN we do not check the validity of the edition data when listing. If you're looking for an exact edition please don't order (at least not without checking with us first, although we don't always have time to check). We aim to dispatch prompty, the service used will depend on order value and book size. We can ship to most countries, see our shipping policies. Payment is via Abe only.
Anbieter: Scrinium Classical Antiquity, Aalten, Niederlande
John Murray, London, 1997. VII,249p. ills.(B&W photographs and line drawings. Original light blue cloth with pictorial dust wrps. spine gilt titled. The ?Daily Life of the Egyptian Gods? is an introduction to ancient Egyptian religion and at the same time a most interesting historiographic experiment. (?) It presents a general, synchronous interpretation of some two thousand years of religious history in ancient Egypt. (?) The first half of the book, ?The Gods among Themselves?, (?) is mainly based on myth and, on the whole, narrative elements of ancient Egyptian religious literature. The study of Egyptian mythology has to face, on the one hand, the extreme importance of myth demonstrated by allusions and quotations in each and every Egyptian religious text and, on the other hand, the scarcity of extant myths told in full. Meeks?s approach permits a comprehensive synthesis of Egyptian mythology, including materials from the Coffin Texts as well as the temples of the Greco-Roman period, two very large groups of texts that have only in recent decades begun to exert a substantial influence on the general and introductory literature on ancient Egyptian religion. The second half, ?Meditating between the Gods and Humankind? (?) deals with the ritual aspect of Egyptian religion. It deserves the attention of the nonspecialist because, along with its own interesting perspective, it surveys and summarises in a systematic way much of the less familiar source material from the temples of the Greco-Roman period made accessible by the work of French Egyptologists. (?) It is not really the intention (of the authors - ND) to invest gods with a life of their own, independent of human thinking and imagination, but rather to find a level of inquiry on which the human ideas expressed in myth and ritual may be systematically described. And their project is not a theistic enterprise; its focus is always divine functions and ways of interacting, never the personality of individual gods. (?) The author consider their investigation an approach to ?the essential structure of Egyptian myth not as an imaginary construct designed to justify the reality of ritual acts, but rather as a reality whose existence could not be maintained without rites. It is to confront the gods without intermediaries, as the extant documents suggest one should.? (?) A lot of predictable criticism might be advanced against this ?bracketing? of divine life, but it should be borne in mind that the book is no naive compilation of religious ideas. It is a very conscious experiment exploring the possibilities of ancient Egyptian religion. (?) The enterprise seems least convincing when its questionnaire comes closest to animal ethology. (?) Much more convincing and instructive are the accounts of temple ritual. (?). A n experiment, the book is instructive in a general methodological sense. (?) In ?The Daily Life of the Egyptian Gods? The ethological approach is conscious and unmixed and, not least, paired with indisputable Egyptological scholarship, This makes the book a very clear demonstration of both the potential and the shortcomings of the ethology of gods.? (J. PODEMANN SØRENSEN in History of Religions, 1999, p.391-392).