
audiobook
In this study the author follows the thread of a striking idea that runs through many ancient cultures: the notion of a dying deity who takes on the community’s sins and misfortunes. By unpacking the symbolism of the scapegoat, the work shows how early peoples confused the physical act of bearing a load with the imagined transfer of spiritual burden. The analysis moves from primitive rites to the sophisticated theological reflections of later civilizations, revealing a common human impulse to externalise suffering.
The book surveys vivid examples, from the brutal Aztec ceremonies that offered human victims to keep their gods youthful, to island customs that treat objects as carriers of disease. Each case is presented with careful description, allowing listeners to see how the principle of vicarious suffering appears in diverse settings. The author’s clear, scholarly voice makes complex comparative mythology accessible, inviting anyone curious about why societies have long turned death into a symbolic means of renewal.
Language
en
Duration
~20 hours (1166K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2013-05-07
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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