Showing posts with label symbolism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label symbolism. Show all posts

Birth of the Symbol: Ancient Readers at the Limits of Their Texts Review

Birth of the Symbol: Ancient Readers at the Limits of Their Texts
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This book must be read by philosophers, students of the classics, literary theorists, and philologists. It was one of my favorite books that I read in 2007. The scholarship in this book is thorough and exhaustive, you can tell that Struck spent hours each day pouring over the source materials for this treatise. The book is an indepth treatment of the importance of allegorists and their use of metaphor and symbolism in their writings on myth, philosophy, and mystery religions.
Struck's book shows the difference between the writing approach of Aristotle and his followers and that of writers from the presocratics to the neoplatonists, who were more concerned with the use of symbolism in their own writings and exegesis in interpreting the writers who came before them.
Struck explains the radical change in interpretation of ancient writers by the analytical exegesis started by Aristotle. Struck goes to great lengths to show that the philosophers and poets before Aristotle were into and heavily used the allegorical and the metaphorical in their writings. When Aristotle categorized the types of writing before him by bifurcating the poetical from the analytical, he split the exegesis of philosophers, specifically the presocratics, into two camps: those who followed Aristotle's analytical style of writing and understanding of texts and those who Struck refers to as the allegorists.
Struck rallies and impressive amount of study into the surprising extent of how many allegorical writers there actually were; including philosopher poets, who existed during the Archaic period of Greece, the Classical period, and well into the Roman empire. He dispels the belief, which he thinks to be too pervasive in contemporary scholarship, that the use of the symbol, metaphor, and allegory in the understanding and writing of texts in the scholarly milieu of Greece was marginal and representative of a minority at best. He cites evidence upon evidence in favor of his thesis by delving into such writers as the commentator of the Derveni Papyrus, the presocratics, and the neoplatonists and others, including Iamblichus, Proclus, Plotinus, Chrysippus and too many more to mention. Struck solidifies his case, as to the early and extensive use of the symbol, by giving a chronological study of the philological birth and growth of the actual word "symbol", how it was first used, who used it, in what context was it used and in what way did writers understand a symbol to be.
This book is intense, in the amount of scholarship it includes and in the way Struck writes about his evidence. Despite his indepth look into the writings and philosophy of the allegorists, Struck's prose is never heavy handed like you would expect a work like this to be. The details, rigorous analysis of different allegorists, and presentation of evidence in his favor are not a hindrance to reading the book, that is, you never get bogged down in the reading. It will take you a week to read it, but only because the material is so laden with insight that you find yourself putting down the book in order to think about what you just read. Struck's prose is extremely lucid and enjoyable for being a work of scholarship (never boring). In fact, the book reads as almost a mystery novel and what a mystery he spins for the reader!

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Nearly all of us have studied poetry and been taught to look for the symbolic as well as literal meaning of the text. Is this the way the ancients saw poetry? In Birth of the Symbol, Peter Struck explores the ancient Greek literary critics and theorists who invented the idea of the poetic "symbol."

The book notes that Aristotle and his followers did not discuss the use of poetic symbolism. Rather, a different group of Greek thinkers--the allegorists--were the first to develop the notion. Struck extensively revisits the work of the great allegorists, which has been underappreciated. He links their interest in symbolism to the importance of divination and magic in ancient times, and he demonstrates how important symbolism became when they thought about religion and philosophy. "They see the whole of great poetic language as deeply figurative," he writes, "with the potential always, even in the most mundane details, to be freighted with hidden messages."

Birth of the Symbol offers a new understanding of the role of poetry in the life of ideas in ancient Greece. Moreover, it demonstrates a connection between the way we understand poetry and the way it was understood by important thinkers in ancient times.


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The Book of Gods & Goddesses: A Visual Directory of Ancient and Modern Deities Review

The Book of Gods and Goddesses: A Visual Directory of Ancient and Modern Deities
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This is an interesting little book I got from the library.
For those interested, here's a list of all the cultures/whatnot that this book explores by listing some of its gods and goddesses: Mesopotamia, Persia, and Canaan; Egyptian; Greek and Roman; Celtic; Norse; Aztec and Maya; Native North and South American; Indian; Chinese; Japanese; African; Afro-Caribbean.
It was pretty interesting to look at all the different cultures and their Gods. I was mainly interested in reading the entry about the Greek Goddes Hekate (also spelled 'Hecate') and wasn't disappointed. Though, this is the first time I've seen an illustartuion of Her with snakes for hair. (Looked more like Medusa to me, who wasn't included in this book.)
This book also includes a little about each culture before listing its Gods (which all have some kind of an illustration). It also has an index of all the Gods included, which makes it much easier if you're searching for a specific one.
All in all, a pretty interesting little book. As I said before, I borrowed mine from the library. You might want to check if you're library has it just to make sure if this is something you want to buy.
-Ater

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Discover a host of gods and goddesses, some of them familiar, others forgotten or unknown. Drawn from cultures around the globe, divided by region and fully illustrated. From Tiamat (the great mother goddess of the ancient Mesopotamianst) to Olorun (the "Owner of the Heavens" for the Yoruba people of Nigeria).

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The Penguin Dictionary of Symbols (Dictionary, Penguin) Review

The Penguin Dictionary of Symbols (Dictionary, Penguin)
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This is a thinker's dictionary, not a guide to road signs and icons. The editors took the trouble to recruit symbol experts from many different professions, ranging from the paranormal to the skeptical academic. The result is a dictionary with entries that have more depth than the usual "quick hits" that other symbolism dictionaries give you. Chevalier is not afraid to give contradictory or contrasting meanings of icons. (He is not a universalist, but a relativist.) He is usually careful to identify the culture in which a particular meaning is given. I keep this in easy reach on my bookshelf, reminding myself, however, that no dictionary on this subject can possibly cover all the meanings a symbol may have. It is worth having around.

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This is a remarkable dictionary, exploring the vast and various symbols which abound in literature, religion, national identity and are found at the very heart of our dreams and sub-conscious. Compiled by an international team of experts, each entry is given its complete range of interpretations - sexual and spiritual, official and subversive, cultural and religious - to bring meaning and insight to the symbol.

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Egyptian Tomb Architecture: The archaeological facts of pharaonic circular symbolism (bar s) Review

Egyptian Tomb Architecture: The archaeological facts of pharaonic circular symbolism (bar s)
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This title is now available from Amazon.co.uk for less than $20.00
Oxbow books have reviewed as follows:
"This thesis, sure to prove controversial, examines the geometry of Old Kingdom Royal tomb architecture, arguing for far greater levels of mathematical sophistication than hitherto admitted. Adding his own contribution to the Black Athena debate, Lightbody also claims that the debts in measurement, geometry and mathematics which the Greeks owe to the Egyptians has also not been fully recognised, not least due to an overfocusing on philological evidence."
More Detail:
Egyptian Tomb Architecture:
The Archaeological Facts of Pharaonic Circular Symbolism
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Announcement:
On Saturday 11th October, I launched the new publication shown above at the Burrell Collection Museum in Glasgow,
with a lecture on the same subject matter given to Egyptology Scotland.
Thank you to everyone for your help with this in the form of discussions and/or constructive feedback,
and in many other ways. I hope my efforts are a worthwhile contribution to this subject matter.
The publication is available through Hadrian Books and through Amazon.co.uk.

Best Regards to all,
Dave Lightbody
Egyptian Tomb Architecture:
The Archaeological Facts of Pharaonic Circular Symbolism
By David I Lightbody
British Archaeological Reports
International Series S1852
ISBN 978 1 4073 0339 0
Xiii+88 pages; 77 figures, maps, plans, drawings and photographs; 4 data appendices
The objective of this monograph is to describe and explain the meanings underlying some otherwise anomalous
archaeological data drawn from the study of Ancient Egypt. An explanation for the phenomena observed has
hitherto remained elusive.
The data is principally concerned with royal funerary architecture from the Old Kingdom, and the underlying
systems of measurement and geometry that were employed therein. As well as providing a description and
explanation for the data, this work also has the objective of providing the first synthesis of related
cultural information drawn from several different textual and archaeological resources. The general subject
matter is the pharaonic funerary architecture from Old Kingdom Egypt, and the work focuses specifically on
the circular proportions deliberately incorporated into the tomb designs by the architects.
In 1940, the famous Egyptologist Professor Sir William Matthew Flinders Petrie wrote, regarding these proportions
that: 'but these relations of area and of circular ratios are so systematic that we should grant they were
in the builder's design' (Petrie: Wisdom of the Egyptians 1940: 30).
So Petrie concluded that the circular proportions in the funerary monuments were deliberate, yet he never ventured
an explanation for the phenomenon.
Now that the publication is in print, I can finally reveal that the underlying symbolism expressed in these proportions,
and deliberately included in the primary dimensions of the monuments by the architects, was that of the 'shen ring' symbol.
The shen ring represented 'eternal protection', and by including this symbolism into the architecture, at the sarcophagus,
tomb and overall structure levels, the Egyptians were incorporating a protective perimeter around the pharaonic burial
place in a symbolic form.
The more familiar 'cartouche', that is a rounded oval shape always shown protecting the pharaoh's name, is in fact a modified
shen ring, and so we can see that the related ideas of pharaonic protection extended from the hieroglyphs naming the living king,
to his funerary architecture, and yet represented the same ideas of eternal protection for the ruler.
The book details all of the supporting facts and evidence for the first time, and critiques all existing publications that
have not reached this conclusion previously.
Due to the interdisciplinary nature of the subject matter, additional effort has been made to ensure that
the data and discussion is accessible to scholars and keen amateurs from all related disciplines.
Contents:
1) Fundamentals of Ancient Egyptian mathematics and architecture
2) The evidence and facts of Egyptian circular symbolism
3) The symbolism
4) Methodology, analysis and discussion of mathematics
5) Arguments from authorities
6) Archaeology and philology; fieldwork and deskwork
7) Conclusion
8) Appendix 1: Secondary issues
9) Appendix 2: Social context of early Egyptology
10 Appendix 3: Egyptian and Greek mathematics
11) Appendix 4 Quotes from the Greeks
12) Reference
The publication is currently available only from Archaeopress through Hadrian Books at a price of £25.00.,
but will be made available through Amazon in due course.
This should help demystify some of the issues and debunk some of the speculation. More to follow.

Enjoy!
Dave Lightbody.
[...]

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The objective of this monograph is to describe and explain the meanings underlying some otherwise anomalous archaeological data drawn from the study of Ancient Egypt. An explanation for the phenomena observed has hitherto proved elusive. The data is principally concerned with royal funerary architecture from the Old Kingdom, and the underlying systems of measurement and geometry that were employed therein. As well as providing a description and explanation for the data, this work also has the objective of providing the first synthesis of related cultural information drawn from several different textual and archaeological resources. The general subject matter is pharaonic funerary architecture from Old Kingdom Egypt, and the work focuses specifically on the circular proportions deliberately incorporated into the tomb designs by the architects. Contents: Introduction; 1) Fundamentals of Ancient Egyptian mathematics and architecture; 2) The Evidence and facts of Egyptian circular proportions; 3) The symbolism; 4) Methodology, analysis and discussion of mathematics; 5) Arguments from authorities; 6) Archaeology and philology; fieldwork and deskwork; 7) Conclusions; Appendix 1: Secondary Issues; Appendix 2: Social Context of early Egyptology; Appendix 3: Egyptian and Greek Mathematics; Appendix 4: Quotes from the Greeks.

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Colour & Painting in Ancient Egypt Review

Colour and Painting in Ancient Egypt
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This book is a very good and scholarly source for those who are in the field, and, in my opinion, an interesting read in general (although some of the articles are definately much more aimed at a professional audience).

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This volume arises from the International Colloquium on Colour and Painting in Ancient Egypt, organized by the Department of Egyptian Antiquities in the British Museum in 1996. Contributions range from the search for accurate methods of recording painted scenes on the monuments, through ancient painting techniques, to the symbolic meaning of colour to the ancient Egyptians, an understanding of which allows a better appreciation of their artistic creations. The application of the latest scientific techniques to ancient pigments is also well represented, a field of study that casts new light on the materials used to create the artistic masterpieces of Egypt.

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