Abstract
This paper stems from the attempt to show that the sacrifice is not – as Marcel
Detienne claimed – a ‘notion of yesterday’, by means of the recognition of a sort of
compatibility: some central elements of the sacrifice in ancient Greece can be analyzed and
read throughout the filter of some theoretical observations about sacrifice made by the Italian
anthropologist Valerio Valeri, scholar not of the ancient Greek world, but of the Polynesian
and Indonesian contemporary ones. My aim is to examine the paradigmatic case of the
foundation of Greek sacrificial practices – i.e. the ‘archetypal’ sacrifice set up by Prometheus
– in order to show that ‘sacrifice’ is still a useful and necessary notion and that, more
specifically, its ‘inclusive notion’ of Valeri is good to describe the contents and various
meanings of these Greek rituals.
Lingua originale | Italian |
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pagine (da-a) | 111-134 |
Numero di pagine | 24 |
Rivista | L'IMMAGINE RIFLESSA |
Volume | XXIV |
Numero di pubblicazione | 1 |
Stato di pubblicazione | Pubblicato - 1 gen 2015 |
Pubblicato esternamente | Sì |