watertank: (Default)
watertank ([personal profile] watertank) wrote2006-10-23 08:24 pm

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around 9,500BC, according to Cauvin, we see dawning in the Levant 'in a still unchanged economic context of hunting and gathering', the development of two dominat symbolic figures, the Woman and the Bull. The Woman is the supreme figure, he says, often shown as giving birth to a Bull.
Cauvin sees in this the true origin of religion. His main point is that this is the first time humans have been represented as gods, that the femalie and male principle are both represented, and that this marked achange in mentality before the domestication of plants and animals took place. It is easier to see why the female should be chosen rather than the male. The female form is a symbol of fertility. At a time when child mortality was high, true fertility would have been highly prized. Such worship was designed to ensure the well-being of the tribe or family unit. Ibid. p 60


cf: be fruitful and multiply

[identity profile] dignam.livejournal.com 2006-10-24 04:37 am (UTC)(link)
We're on exactly the same bead: you, me, and Cauvin. (And many others too.) Please send me your private email to caffeinated_spider@yahoo.com and I'll send you some writings on a periodical I'm trying to create, desperately, in between work hours. I would love to feature your work, including your haiku, and especially an article about this book you're reading.

[identity profile] watertank.livejournal.com 2006-10-24 05:24 am (UTC)(link)
my e-mail address is eugene.wasserstrom@gmail.com

Looking forward to your writings.