Hamilton, 'Greek Religion', Bryn Mawr Classical Review 9506
URL = http://hegel.lib.ncsu.edu/stacks/serials/bmcr/bmcr-9506-hamilton-greek
@@@@95.6.2, Bremmer, Greek Religion
Jan N. Bremmer, Greek Religion. Greece & Rome New Surveys
in the Classics No.24. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1994.
Pp.x, 111; 15 figures. ISBN 0-19-922073-5. To order call OUP New
York (1-800-451-7556).
Reviewed by Richard Hamilton -- Bryn Mawr College
rhamilto@cc.brynmawr.edu
In the preface to this "survey of developments" since
Burkert's Greek Religion (1977), we are invited to unmask
the author's cultural bias and immediately told the answer.
Indeed, this volume's combination of comprehensive annotated
bibliography and blunt, eye-catching and sometimes baffling text
seems quintessentially Dutch; except for its preference for
poetry over epigraphy (or anything archaeological) it could have
been written by H. Versnel.
The bibliography is obviously the key feature and it is
excellent--no scholar of religion, perhaps excepting Burkert
himself, will recognize all the references. Since the
bibliography is nestled in endnotes (why not footnotes??), it is
probably best to read straight through, no problem since the
chapter headings are clear and the prose direct; and that way one
is not too inconvenienced by the shorthand references following
an initial citation no matter how many notes earlier. An index of
"names, subjects and passages" helps a bit (and includes a
surprisingly large number of Americans given their low ranking in
the "importance sweepstakes" of the preface).
The text itself is brisk, dogmatic, often illuminating,
sometimes eccentric. "General Characteristics" (I) are reasonably
said to include intermingling of sacred and profane
("embeddedness"), concern with the here and now, male domination,
lack of religious establishment. B rightly highlights regional
and chronological variation here, though not later. Poets are
given pride of place among the religious specialists, fairly
shocking until it becomes clear that B is thinking about the
archaic age where poets provide the only evidence. Not
surprisingly, Chapter II "Gods" concentrates on the poets' view
(mostly Homer) and constructs an avowedly panhellenic pantheon
("from which we should not automatically extrapolate") with Zeus,
Athena and Apollo at the center, Poseidon and Demeter
"off-centre" (disorderly because female, not because
agricultural, pace Burkert), along with Dionysus, who is
not the masked Other combining opposites (pace Vernant)
but a god of ambiguity and disorder, as if that is wildly
different. Oddly B stresses "the point of departure should be the
god's festivals" which he then ignores; even more oddly Sophilos'
vase showing the wedding of Peleus and Thetis (not illustrated;
no ABV reference).is made the key to the whole pantheon.
The shortest chapter, III "Sanctuaries", gives only two
pages to buildings ("some temples always remained roofless"),
statues (goddesses sit, gods stand; aniconism indicated the
abnormality of the cult) and personnel (initiatory cults
sometimes had adolescent priests; on vases priests are
distinguished from worshippers but sometimes not from the god).
Location confirms the pantheon: "outside the polis we usually
find sanctuaries of Poseidon, Dionysus, Hera and Artemis".
(Earlier Artemis was at the center of the pantheon, as in
Sophilos.) Sanctuaries served as reserve banks, repositories of
law codes, and in specific cases as hospitals, oracles and
mystery sites but mainly "to enable worshippers to sacrifice and
to make votive offerings".
IV "Ritual" is a modern category, elaborate rituals being
called heortai, "good food, good company and good
entertainment". Major festivals comprised "dances, musical and
athletic contests, prayers and hymns, processions and, most
important of all, animal sacrifices," differing from the
Christian in lack of gratitude (rather praise and honor),
loudness, sung hymnic prayers oddly said to include dithyrambs.
Processions made symbolic statements about power relations; the
preferred sacrificial victims were sheep and goats. Though
sacrifice was not filled with fear and guilt, pace
Burkert, the killing itself was unpalatable and marginalized
(Vernant). (The apparent contradiction here may reflect B's
unease with such "reductive formulas", and he calls for further
research "based on literary, epigraphical, iconographical and
archaeological evidence".) Fully half the chapter describes
initiation, mostly Cretan, and cyclical ritual, basically a
rehash of Burkert's description of the Anthesteria, here said to
be an (unofficial) New Year celebration.
Chapter V "Myth" begins with a short historical survey of
approaches and a definition, "traditional tales relevant to
society". Combining Indo-European origins and oriental imports,
myths were foremost pure entertainment but also "defined gods and
illuminated rituals, supplied arguments in debates, served as
models of ethical and religious behaviour, helped to establish
political identities or advance political claims, and contributed
towards the Greek mentalite". Examples of each are given,
ending with a nod to the visual arts and LIMC. The bibliographic
coverage here is particularly impressive.
In Chapter VI "Gender" initiation once again appears, here
as the closest parallel for female rituals such as the
Arrhephoria and Arkteia, which are described at length, even
though "after the disintegration of the puberty rites the wedding
seems to have become the main rite dramatizing the transition
from youth to adulthood for girls of all classes". Women were
associated with "dirt" hence marginalized from most ritual
activity, though female festivals such as the Thesmophoria
(described a length), maenadism (!), and the Adonia, "enabled
women to move among other women for a limited period" and women
"played an important role in the new cults and 'sects' that
gradually infiltrated the Greek world". Attic vases present us
with positive roles of women but always being subject to or
serving men. Mythology supplied few females as attractive role
models: women tend to betray husband or family, women are
frightening, goddesses cross gender boundaries (crafts, war,
hunting).
We end with a chapter surveying mystery cults (Eleusinian,
Orphic, Bacchic) and the transformations in Athens at the end of
the 5th C. suggested by atheism trials and ecstatic cults, and
then an appendix on the Indo-European "genesis" of Greek
religion.
This "booklet" is essential for libraries, students of Greek
myth and ritual and probably anyone interested in Greek culture,
primarily for the bibliography but also for the challenging,
wide-ranging text. Specialists will be infuriated by the
(mis)representation of their particular positions but at the same
time forced to acknowledge the value of the work in general. Let
us hope B is willing to give us an update in a decade.