Two Notes on the Collection of Greek Ritual Norms

Launched in 2017, the Collection of Greek Ritual Norms provides an open-access commentary on selected ancient Greek inscriptions which define parameters of ritual practice. These short notes address two issues superficially concerning the name of the Collection of Greek Ritual Norms, but more dee...

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Main Authors: Carbon, Jan-Mathieu, Pirenne-Delforge, Vinciane
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Edizioni Ca’ Foscari 2019-12-01
Series:Axon
Subjects:
Online Access:https://edizionicafoscari.unive.it/riviste/axon/2019/2/two-notes-on-the-collection-of-greek-ritual-norms-/
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spelling doaj-25d2eb28ad324b6991f852b8dbab66a22021-06-02T10:47:46ZengEdizioni Ca’ FoscariAxon2532-68482019-12-013210.30687/Axon/2532-6848/2019/02/007journal_article_2572Two Notes on the Collection of Greek Ritual NormsCarbon, Jan-Mathieu 0Pirenne-Delforge, Vinciane 1Collège de FranceCollège de France Launched in 2017, the Collection of Greek Ritual Norms provides an open-access commentary on selected ancient Greek inscriptions which define parameters of ritual practice. These short notes address two issues superficially concerning the name of the Collection of Greek Ritual Norms, but more deeply engaging with what one means by the notion of 'ritual norm' and what one implies in considering such norms 'Greek'. A term like 'cult regulation' might conveniently be used to replace the misnomer 'sacred law', but this encompasses a similarly broad and miscellaneous group of inscriptions. By contrast, the category of 'ritual norm' aims to reframe the discussion by focussing on normativity – paradigms and exceptions – with regard to two key rituals, sacrifice and purification. It thus only partly reprises the corpus of 'sacred laws', while also including other inscriptions or excerpts from them. Calling such norms 'Greek' is not intended as an 'ethnic' designation of the rituals they describe but rather as a reference to the language of the inscriptions. The label 'Greek ritual norms' is thus programmatic, allowing for a wider investigation of the normative characteristics of rituals within the religious 'middle grounds' of the ancient Greek world. https://edizionicafoscari.unive.it/riviste/axon/2019/2/two-notes-on-the-collection-of-greek-ritual-norms-/Ritual. Norm. Cult. Regulation. Hellenicity.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Carbon, Jan-Mathieu
Pirenne-Delforge, Vinciane
spellingShingle Carbon, Jan-Mathieu
Pirenne-Delforge, Vinciane
Two Notes on the Collection of Greek Ritual Norms
Axon
Ritual. Norm. Cult. Regulation. Hellenicity.
author_facet Carbon, Jan-Mathieu
Pirenne-Delforge, Vinciane
author_sort Carbon, Jan-Mathieu
title Two Notes on the Collection of Greek Ritual Norms
title_short Two Notes on the Collection of Greek Ritual Norms
title_full Two Notes on the Collection of Greek Ritual Norms
title_fullStr Two Notes on the Collection of Greek Ritual Norms
title_full_unstemmed Two Notes on the Collection of Greek Ritual Norms
title_sort two notes on the collection of greek ritual norms
publisher Edizioni Ca’ Foscari
series Axon
issn 2532-6848
publishDate 2019-12-01
description Launched in 2017, the Collection of Greek Ritual Norms provides an open-access commentary on selected ancient Greek inscriptions which define parameters of ritual practice. These short notes address two issues superficially concerning the name of the Collection of Greek Ritual Norms, but more deeply engaging with what one means by the notion of 'ritual norm' and what one implies in considering such norms 'Greek'. A term like 'cult regulation' might conveniently be used to replace the misnomer 'sacred law', but this encompasses a similarly broad and miscellaneous group of inscriptions. By contrast, the category of 'ritual norm' aims to reframe the discussion by focussing on normativity – paradigms and exceptions – with regard to two key rituals, sacrifice and purification. It thus only partly reprises the corpus of 'sacred laws', while also including other inscriptions or excerpts from them. Calling such norms 'Greek' is not intended as an 'ethnic' designation of the rituals they describe but rather as a reference to the language of the inscriptions. The label 'Greek ritual norms' is thus programmatic, allowing for a wider investigation of the normative characteristics of rituals within the religious 'middle grounds' of the ancient Greek world.
topic Ritual. Norm. Cult. Regulation. Hellenicity.
url https://edizionicafoscari.unive.it/riviste/axon/2019/2/two-notes-on-the-collection-of-greek-ritual-norms-/
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