
audiobook
This volume turns the spotlight on a recurring pattern in human belief: the reverence of the very things that sustain us. Beginning with the familiar Greek figures of Dionysus and the mother‑daughter pair Demeter‑Persephone, the author traces how societies across Europe and beyond have personified cultivated plants—especially cereals and, to a lesser extent, root crops—as divine beings who die and are reborn each season. The comparative lens reveals striking parallels in myths that link harvest cycles to the cycles of life, showing how agricultural life shapes spiritual imagination.
The inquiry then moves beyond the fields to the world of hunters, fishers and herders, whose gods are the very animals they depend on. Here the text explores the surprisingly concrete belief that the souls of slain beasts persist, prompting rituals aimed at soothing restless spirits. By weaving together agricultural and hunting traditions, the work offers a nuanced picture of how humanity has consistently infused its food sources with sacred meaning, shedding light on the deep psychological roots of religion.
Language
en
Duration
~14 hours (811K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2013-02-10
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1854–1941
Best known for The Golden Bough, this Scottish social anthropologist and folklorist helped shape the modern study of myth, magic, and religion. His wide-ranging comparisons influenced generations of writers, scholars, and readers.
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