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Output details

33 - Theology and Religious Studies

Canterbury Christ Church University

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Output 22 of 22 in the submission
Article title

Vertikale Hierarchie und archaische Sakralität: Zur mythopoësis des Fußes

Type
D - Journal article
Title of journal
Paragrana
Article number
-
Volume number
21
Issue number
1
First page of article
129
ISSN of journal
0938-0116
Year of publication
2012
URL
-
Number of additional authors
0
Additional information

In German

Interdisciplinary
-
Cross-referral requested
-
Research group
None
Proposed double-weighted
No
Double-weighted statement
-
Reserve for a double-weighted output
No
Non-English
Yes
English abstract

This article examines aspects of the Indo-European and Ancient Near Eastern mythopoësis of the human body. Utilizing post-Eliadic historical and philological phenomenology, the article argues that the homological hierarchical symbolism of the human body in myth and poetry reflects the archaic religious psychology of verticality. Indo-Iranian cosmogony and sociogony, body metaphors of subjugation and healing and the specific pattern of the mythopoësis of the foot and its implications for Indo-Iranian rites and culture are analyzed. In the concluding case study the close reading of the Purāṇic Diti narrative exemplifies the decisive role vertical hierarchy plays in Indian thought and myth.