Arktouros: Hellenic Studies Presented to Bernard M. W. Knox on the Occasion of His 65th Birthday

Portada
Glen Warren Bowersock, Walter Burkert, Michael C. J. Putnam
Walter de Gruyter, 1979 - 460 pàgines
No detailed description available for "Arktouros".
 

Continguts

Originality
3
A Thousand Shapes
12
Form und Funktion des Welt
25
Sapphos
37
Pindars
63
kaì kɛívoɩg Pindar Nemean 5 22
81
O suitably
91
Attossas Absence in the Final
101
The Athenian
229
Leonidas the Regicide? Specula
253
Greek Rhetoric and History the Case of Isocrates
290
A Metrical Epitaph from
308
Stars Unseen
330
The Acquiring of Philosophical
354
W W FORTENBAUGH Rutgers University New Brunswick
372
Themistius The Last
391

Recognizing what when
115
On the Eye
130
Helen and Persephone
162
Sacrificial Ritual in
181
Boy Actors in
199
Hero Cult in
219
Some Loose Ends
409
Kaltblütiges Schnarchen
427
E A FISHER George Washington University Washington D C
440
List of Plates
462
Copyright

Altres edicions - Mostra-ho tot

Frases i termes més freqüents

Referències a aquest llibre

Sobre l'autor (1979)

German-born scholar Walter Burkert currently teaches at the University of Zurich. He is the leading active scholar of the religion of early and classical Greece. Burkert's work proceeds through intense, meticulous historical and philological investigation, seeking to understand Greek religion in and of itself. His studies wed philology and history with methods drawn from anthropology and resemble the work of Jonathan Z. Smith. But, unlike Smith, who seems to rule out diachronic considerations categorically in favor of synchronic taxonomies or analogical comparisons, Burkert remains interested in questions of long-term historical evolution and cross-cultural influence. Burkert gives particular attention to psychological causation and the biological roots of human behavior as revealed by the science of ethology. For example, his study of Greek sacrifice, Homo necans, roots the practice of sacrifice in the biological necessity faced by prehistoric hunting groups that killed to survive. Burkert suggests that this necessary, aggressive behavior gave rise to anxiety, but through the practice of sacrifice the unavoidable aggression, which otherwise threatened to destroy society, was redirected to its promotion instead. In Structure and History Burkert's theoretical concerns are larger, including both myth and ritual. The precise relation between myth and ritual has been a vexing question for scholars of ancient religions; Burkert places them side by side and links them at a structural level. He thinks ritual is older than myth, because it is a form of behavior found even in animals. Nevertheless, ritual and myth share several important features: Both depend upon basic biological or cultural programs of action and detachment from pragmatic reality. Both serve communication. Because myth and ritual are related in this way, it is possible for them to be found together. Burkert's Greek Religion is the current, standard handbook on the religions of ancient Greece. His most recent work has been devoted to examining the influence of the ancient Near East on archaic Greek civilization.

Informació bibliogràfica