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El. knyga: Ancient Mediterranean Sacrifice

Edited by (Assistant Professor of Classical Studies, Boston University, Boston, MA), Edited by (Assistant Professor of New Testament and Christiai, Boston University, Boston, MA)
  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 05-Aug-2011
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press Inc
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780199876402
  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 05-Aug-2011
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press Inc
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780199876402

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Examining the diverse religious texts and practices of the late Hellenistic and Roman periods, this collection of essays investigates the many meanings and functions of ritual sacrifice in the ancient world. The essays survey sacrificial acts, ancient theories, and literary as well as artistic depictions of sacrifice, showing that any attempt to identify a single underlying significance of sacrifice is futile. Sacrifice cannot be defined merely as a primal expression of violence, despite the frequent equation of sacrifice to religion and sacrifice to violence in many modern scholarly works; nor is it sufficient to argue that all sacrifice can be explained by guilt, by the need to prepare and distribute animal flesh, or by the communal function of both the sacrificial ritual and the meal.
As the authors of these essays demonstrate, sacrifice may be invested with all of these meanings, or none of them. The killing of the animal, for example, may take place offstage rather than in sight, and the practical, day-to-day routine of plant and animal offerings may have been invested with meaning, too. Yet sacrificial acts, or discourses about these acts, did offer an important site of contestation for many ancient writers, even when the religions they were defending no longer participated in sacrifice. Negotiations over the meaning of sacrifice remained central to the competitive machinations of the literate elite, and their sophisticated theological arguments did not so much undermine sacrificial practice as continue to assume its essential validity.
Ancient Mediterranean Sacrifice offers new insight into the connections and differences among the Greek and Roman, Jewish and Christian religions.

Recenzijos

This rich collection of essays is the fruit of a 2008 conference in Boston devoted to exploring the multiple meanings and functions of sacrifice across the Greek, Roman, Jewish, and Christian traditions in the late Hellenistic and Roman periods. * J. Bussanich, CHOICE * the book offers a valuable and well-documented discussion * Christoph Auffarth, Journal of Religion in Europe *

Acknowledgments vii
Contributors ix
Abbreviations xiii
Introduction 3(32)
PART I Theorizing Sacrifice
1 The Religion of Plant and Animal Offerings Versus the Religion of Meanings, Essences, and Textual Mysteries
35(22)
Stanley Stowers
2 Contesting the Meaning of Animal Sacrifice
57(18)
Daniel Ullucci
3 Egyptian Religion and the Problem of the Category "Sacrifice"
75(19)
David Frankfurter
4 Jewish Sacrifice: Its Nature and Function (According to Philo)
94(12)
William K. Gilders
5 Symbol, Function, Theology, and Morality in the Study of Priestly Ritual
106(19)
Jonathan Klawans
PART II Negotiating Power through Sacrifice
6 Political Murder and Sacrifice: From Roman Republic to Empire
125(17)
Zsuzsanna Varhelyi
7 The Embarrassment of Blood: Early Christians and Others on Sacrifice, War, and Rational Worship
142(25)
Laura Nasrallah
8 The End of Public Sacrifice: Changing Definitions of Sacrifice in Post-Constantinian Rome and Italy
167(20)
Michele Renee Salzman
PART III Toward a Theology of Sacrifice
9 The Theology of Animal Sacrifice in the Ancient Greek World: Origins and Developments
187(16)
James B. Rives
10 A Satirist's Sacrifices: Lucian's On Sacrifices and the Contestation of Religious Traditions
203(11)
Fritz Graf
11 Bonds of Flesh and Blood: Porphyry, Animal Sacrifice and Empire
214(21)
Philippa Townsend
PART IV Imaginary Sacrifice
12 Don't Cry Over Spilled Blood
235(16)
Kathryn Mcclymond
13 Passing: Jesus' Circumcision and Strategic Self-Sacrifice
251(14)
Andrew S. Jacobs
14 Confounding Blood: Jewish Narratives of Sacrifice and Violence in Late Antiquity
265(22)
Raanan S. Boustan
Bibliography 287(38)
Index 325
Jennifer Wright Knust is author of Abandoned to Lust: Sexual Slander and Ancient Christianity (2005). She has held fellowships from the Henry Luce III Foundation/Association of Theological Schools and the Humanities Foundation at Boston University and is completing a book on the transmission of the Biblical story of the woman taken in adultery.

Zsuzsanna Vįrhelyi works primarily on Roman social, cultural, and religious history. She is author of essays on Roman religion, sacrifice and ancient society, and her monograph, The Religion of Senators in the Roman Empire: Power and the Beyond, appeared in 2010. She is currently working on a book on Roman imperial selfhood.