Seth, God of Confusion: A Study of His Role in Egyptian Mythology and Religion (Ancient Near East) Review

Seth, God of Confusion: A Study of His Role in Egyptian Mythology and Religion (Ancient Near East)
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Overall, the author provides an excellent profile of the god Seth (or Set) and His place in the Egyptian pantheon. Discussed in detail is the symbology contained in the story of Seth's conflict with Horus, including Seth's homosexual rape of the child Horus, Seth's relationship to Isis, Osiris, and Nepthys, and His special position as a god of foreigners. In this latter area, Seth's relation to, and possible derivation from imported Semetic deities is covered thoroughly.
A main theme of this monograph is Seth's shifting place in the Egyptian pantheon of deities. Throughout ancient Egypt's long history, Seth was alternatively honored and despised, depending on the changing dominance of different religious, political, and social currents. Eventually, as Egypt came increasingly under the domination of foreigners, Seth, the god associated with foreigners and foreign things, became thoroughly demonized in the popular mind, and may well have been the prototype for the Christian Satan.
My only real criticism of this study, and this is only personal, is the highly specialized academic tone of the writing, along with the frequent inclusion of long untranslated quotations from German and French authors. The monograph is obviously written for the specialist in Egyptology rather than for the general reader. The untranslated quotations will, of course, pose no difficulty for readers who are fluent in both German and French.
I give the book a four star rating, only denying the fifth star for the reason metioned in the above paragraph.

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