Description

Book Synopsis

Drawing on the unfamiliar genre of the death liturgy, the author arrives at a remarkably comprehensive view of the religion of death in ancient Egypt.



Trade Review

Death and Salvation in Ancient Egypt serves as a compendious introduction to how ancient Egyptians approached their mortality as well as their impending immortality. Throughout, Assmann continues to build upon his vast store of important publications, yet again bringing to his work a deep background in theoretical literature, especially anthropology and philosophy. This gives his work a decidedly comparative flair, citing parallels or contrasts with cultures ancient or modern, Near Eastern or otherwise. Much of Assmann's Egyptological work has become required reading, and Death and Salvation will be no exception. Controversial, insightful, incredibly informed, and in constant contact with the primary textual material, this volume will continue to inspire discussion for years to come.

* Journal of Near Eastern Studies *

Assmann astounds the reader with his deep knowledge of religious texts from all periods of Egyptian civilization and from the Greeks and Romans too. He is equally familiar with evidence from art and architecture.... He leads the reader through the maddeningly opaque pronouncements of Egyptian intellectuals about the nature of death, its origin, its meaning, its importance. Every page shines a fresh light on a topic that fascinates us all, but leaves us puzzled. Assmann's book will take its place as classic study and shows again why he is justly regarded as one of the great Egyptologists writing today.

* Bryn Mawr Classical Review *

Table of Contents

Translator's NoteIntroduction: Death and CulturePart One. Images of Death
Chapter 1. Death as Dismemberment
Chapter 2. Death as Social Isolation
Chapter 3. Death as Enemy
Chapter 4. Death as Dissociation: The Person of the Deceased and Its Constituent Elements
Chapter 5. Death as Separation and Reversal
Chapter 6. Death as Transition
Chapter 7. Death as Return
Chapter 8. Death as Mystery
Chapter 9. Going Forth by DayPart Two. Rituals and Recitations
Chapter 10. Mortuary Liturgies and Mortuary Literature
Chapter 11. In the Sign of the Enemy: The Protective Wake in the Place of Embalming
Chapter 12. The Night of Vindication
Chapter 13. Rituals of Transition from Home to Tomb
Chapter 14. Provisioning the Dead
Chapter 15. Sacramental Explanation
Chapter 16. Freedom from the Yoke of Transitoriness: Resultativity and Continuance
Chapter 17. Freedom from the Yoke of Transitoriness: ImmortalityAfterword: Egypt and the History of DeathNotes
Index

Death and Salvation in Ancient Egypt

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    A Paperback / softback by Jan Assmann, David Lorton

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      View other formats and editions of Death and Salvation in Ancient Egypt by Jan Assmann

      Publisher: Cornell University Press
      Publication Date: 21/10/2014
      ISBN13: 9780801479731, 978-0801479731
      ISBN10: 0801479738

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Drawing on the unfamiliar genre of the death liturgy, the author arrives at a remarkably comprehensive view of the religion of death in ancient Egypt.



      Trade Review

      Death and Salvation in Ancient Egypt serves as a compendious introduction to how ancient Egyptians approached their mortality as well as their impending immortality. Throughout, Assmann continues to build upon his vast store of important publications, yet again bringing to his work a deep background in theoretical literature, especially anthropology and philosophy. This gives his work a decidedly comparative flair, citing parallels or contrasts with cultures ancient or modern, Near Eastern or otherwise. Much of Assmann's Egyptological work has become required reading, and Death and Salvation will be no exception. Controversial, insightful, incredibly informed, and in constant contact with the primary textual material, this volume will continue to inspire discussion for years to come.

      * Journal of Near Eastern Studies *

      Assmann astounds the reader with his deep knowledge of religious texts from all periods of Egyptian civilization and from the Greeks and Romans too. He is equally familiar with evidence from art and architecture.... He leads the reader through the maddeningly opaque pronouncements of Egyptian intellectuals about the nature of death, its origin, its meaning, its importance. Every page shines a fresh light on a topic that fascinates us all, but leaves us puzzled. Assmann's book will take its place as classic study and shows again why he is justly regarded as one of the great Egyptologists writing today.

      * Bryn Mawr Classical Review *

      Table of Contents

      Translator's NoteIntroduction: Death and CulturePart One. Images of Death
      Chapter 1. Death as Dismemberment
      Chapter 2. Death as Social Isolation
      Chapter 3. Death as Enemy
      Chapter 4. Death as Dissociation: The Person of the Deceased and Its Constituent Elements
      Chapter 5. Death as Separation and Reversal
      Chapter 6. Death as Transition
      Chapter 7. Death as Return
      Chapter 8. Death as Mystery
      Chapter 9. Going Forth by DayPart Two. Rituals and Recitations
      Chapter 10. Mortuary Liturgies and Mortuary Literature
      Chapter 11. In the Sign of the Enemy: The Protective Wake in the Place of Embalming
      Chapter 12. The Night of Vindication
      Chapter 13. Rituals of Transition from Home to Tomb
      Chapter 14. Provisioning the Dead
      Chapter 15. Sacramental Explanation
      Chapter 16. Freedom from the Yoke of Transitoriness: Resultativity and Continuance
      Chapter 17. Freedom from the Yoke of Transitoriness: ImmortalityAfterword: Egypt and the History of DeathNotes
      Index

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