Affiliation:
1. Department of Classics and Ancient History, University of Bristol Bristol UK
Abstract
Abstract
This article examines the role of mistrust – especially in constructions of purity, impurity, and purification – in ancient Greek religion. It begins by examining so-called scapegoat or pharmakos rituals, in which an individual was expelled from the city, apparently as a purificatory offering to the gods. Recent analyses have argued that these rituals were outlets for community aggression, and/or were resonant with myths of self-sacrifice. This article will suggest a different analysis of the evidence. I offer an alternative way of interpreting these rituals that sets them in a wider context of Greek ritual and belief: it suggests that the ritual of the pharmakos arose in a context of social and spiritual insecurity. This created, I argue, a prevailing dynamic of social and spiritual mistrust, within which the pharmakos ritual emerged – and which it exacerbated.
Subject
Religious studies,History
Reference67 articles.
1. Truth, Purification and Power: Foucault’s Genealogy of Purity and Impurity in and after The Will To Know Lectures.;Adey, Kate
2. De l’art de se méfier.;Allard, Olivier
3. Reflections on Spiritual Insecurity in a Modern African City (Soweto).;Ashforth, Adam
4. Witchcraft, Violence, and Democracy in South Africa;Ashforth, Adam
5. AIDS, Religious Enthusiasm and Spiritual Insecurity in Africa.;Ashforth, Adam