New antiquities : transformations of ancient religion in the new age and beyond
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
New antiquities : transformations of ancient religion in the new age and beyond
Equinox, 2019
- : hbk
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Just as we speak of "dead" languages, we say that religions "die out." Yet sometimes, people try to revive them, today more than ever. New Antiquities addresses this phenomenon through critical examination of how individuals and groups appeal to, reconceptualize, and reinvent the religious world of the ancient Mediterranean as they attempt to legitimize developments in contemporary religious culture and associated activity.
Drawing from the disciplines of religious studies, archaeology, history, philology, and anthropology, New Antiquities explores a diversity of cultic and geographic milieus, ranging from Goddess Spirituality to Neo-Gnosticism, from rural Oregon to the former Yugoslavia. As a survey of the reception of ancient religious works, figures, and ideas in later twentieth-century and contemporary alternative religious practice, New Antiquities will interest classicists, Egyptologists, and historians of religion of many stripes, particularly those focused on modern Theosophy, Gnosticism, Neopaganism, New Religious Movements, Magick, and Occulture. The book is written in a lively and engaging style that will appeal to professional scholars and advanced undergraduates as well as lay scholars.
Table of Contents
1. Introduction: What are New Antiquities?
Dylan M. Burns and Almut-Barbara Renger
2. `From Aphrodite to Kuan Yin'- `The Tao of Venus' and its Modern Genealogy: Invoking Ancient Goddesses in Cos(met)ic Acupuncture
Almut-Barbara Renger
3. Ancient Goddesses for Modern Times or New Goddesses from Ancient Times?
Meret Fehlmann, University of Zurich
4. The Artifice of Daidalos: Modern Minoica as Religious Focus in Contemporary Paganism
Caroline Tully, University of Melbourne
5. Transforming Deities: Modern Pagan Projects of Revival and Reinvention
Kathryn Rountree, Massey University, Auckland
6. Archaeology, Historicity, and Homosexuality in the New Cultus of Antinous: Perceptions of the Past in a Contemporary Pagan Religion
Ethan Doyle White, University College London (doctoral student)
7. Reading History with the Essenes of Elmira
Anne Kreps, University of Oregon
8. The Jungian Gnosticism of the Ecclesia Gnostica
Olav Hammer, University of Southern Denmark
9. The Impact of Scholarship on Contemporary "Gnosticism(s)": A Case Study on the Apostolic Johannite Church and Jeremy Puma
Matthew Dillon, Rice University (doctoral student)
10. Studying the "Gnostic Bible": Samael Aun Weor and the Pistis Sophia
Franz Winter, Vienna University
11. Binding Images: The Contemporary Use and Efficacy of Late Antique Ritual Sigils, Spirit-Beings and Design Elements
Jay Johnston, University of Sydney
12. (Neo-)Bogomil Legends: The Gnosticizing Bogomils of the Twentieth-Century Balkans
Dylan M. Burns and Nemanja Radulovic, University of Belgrade
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