The Stations of the Sun: A History of the Ritual Year in Britain
Autor Ronald Huttonen Limba Engleză Hardback – 20 iun 1996
Toate formatele și edițiile | Preț | Express |
---|---|---|
Paperback (1) | 86.39 lei 10-16 zile | +32.73 lei 6-10 zile |
Oxford University Press – 15 feb 2001 | 86.39 lei 10-16 zile | +32.73 lei 6-10 zile |
Hardback (1) | 1061.73 lei 31-37 zile | |
OUP OXFORD – 20 iun 1996 | 1061.73 lei 31-37 zile |
Preț: 1061.73 lei
Preț vechi: 1493.39 lei
-29% Nou
Puncte Express: 1593
Preț estimativ în valută:
203.28€ • 208.53$ • 171.15£
203.28€ • 208.53$ • 171.15£
Carte tipărită la comandă
Livrare economică 15-21 februarie
Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76
Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780198205708
ISBN-10: 0198205708
Pagini: 584
Ilustrații: 16 pp plates, 1 figure, 5 maps
Dimensiuni: 163 x 242 x 35 mm
Greutate: 1.09 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0198205708
Pagini: 584
Ilustrații: 16 pp plates, 1 figure, 5 maps
Dimensiuni: 163 x 242 x 35 mm
Greutate: 1.09 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Cuprins
The Origins of Christmas; The Twelve Days; The Trials of Christmas; Rites of Celebration and Reassurance; Rites of Purification and Blessing; Rites of Hospitality and Charity; Mummers' Play and Sword Dance; Hobby-Horse and Horn Dance; Misrule; The Reinvention of Christmas; Speeding the Plough; Brigid's Night; Candlemas; Valentines; Shrovetide; Lent; The Origins of Easter; Holy Week; An Egg at Easter; The Easter Holidays; England and St George; Beltane; The May; May Games and Whitsun Ales; Morris and Marian; Rogationtide and Pentecost; Royal Oak; A Merrie May; Corpus Christi; The Midsummer Fires; Sheep, Hay, and Rushes; First Fruits; Harvest Home; Wakes, Revels, and Hoppings; Samhain; Saints and Souls; The Modern Hallowe'en; Blood Month and Virgin Queen; Gunpowder Treason; Conclusions.
Recenzii
a fascinating volume, which any future study of calendar rituals - or of 'pagan residues' in popular culture - will have to take into account.
Students of religion will be impressed by the ample evidence the book provides, not for the survival of pagan religious practices in a Christian era, but for the survival of Catholic practices in a Protestant one.
Well produced and written in a pleasing style, it is a rich source of information about late-medieval calendar customs whose scope extends far beyond the Middle Ages. Stations of the Sun belongs in the reference collection of any college library.
Hutton attempts in a highly readable text that will serve the scholar and general reader alike to provide the first truly complete survey of the history of communal, seasonal rites and customs. To do this he pieced together vast quantities of raw material ... In this engaging exploration his work will be useful to students of popular culture and literature, folklorists, historians, and even the old-fashioned enthusiast.
absorbing study
a scholarly work meticulously detailing the origins of every traditional holiday or ritual day in Britain's history ... As a historical document, the breadth of detail is gripping, but as an exploration of British beliefs over the millenium about to go forever, it's unmissable.
an exhaustive account of the traditions and rituals practised in the British Isles from time immemorial to the present
Hutton's work is not dry as dust but of a piece with the ever-expanding purlieux of social history. He does not string out paragraphs upon a modicum of fact. Each is fertile with detail ... this elegantly produced and remarkably cheap volume will find an honoured place in the library of every self-respecting New Age caravan that is Glastonbury-bound, and, elsewhere, it will command a sale well beyond the run-up to Christmas once known as Advent.
The Stations of the Sun is a dedicated, meticulous piece of research.
scholarly, readable history of British seasonal rituals ... Hutton takes us informatively through "the ritual year", from Christmas to Bonfire Night
he seeks ... to put the record straight rather than stir up controversy for the sake of it, and has prduced a work that will be respected for its temperate argument and its prodigious research. From Christmas to Hallowe'en, there is barely a ritual or a custom that escapes his eye in the most detailed book of its kind ever written.
Ronald Hutton's splendid new book is a comprehensive history of the customs and beliefs whch constitute the ritual year in Britain ... it is a tour de force, from one of the livelist and most wide-ranging of practising English historians ... this is a historical encyclopaedia, unfailingly informative and stimulating; but a connecting thread does run through the book ... This is a welcome work of demystification, bringing the cold light of historical inquiry to bear on an area which has been surrounded with a good deal of pseudo-science and sheer gobbledegook ... this is a marvellously detailed exploration of a now familiar historical pheomenon, the invention of "tradition" ... unfailingly stimulating, learned and engaging book, which places a relatively neglected aspect of English social history firmly on the map.
uncovers a mass of fascinating material about rites and festivals, showing how irrepressible such inventiveness remains in spite of globalised entertainment
He has made an immense, unequalled trawl of documentary records throughout the island. Supported by this and by his previous books on pagan religion and the ritual year, he expounds the subject with greater authority and evidence than anyone before. He presents us with important, even startling, new facts. This is a rich, delightful and stimulating book for browsing, study or reference.
this meticulously argued, painstakingly documented and often fascinating book provides a rich historical analysis of the development of the non-Christian (but also non-pagan) aspects of contemporary festivals
He achieves a great deal as each section, treated in turn with a major calendar festival, ritual or customary period, is a mini-history complete in itself. ... Hutton's studies are well-integrated and produce a coherent whole. ... The Stations of the Sun provides the fullest and most important study yet of British calendar customs. ... Thanks to his work, we are able to recover the full significance of this particular customary period in the British calendar - the ripening of the corn.
Students of religion will be impressed by the ample evidence the book provides, not for the survival of pagan religious practices in a Christian era, but for the survival of Catholic practices in a Protestant one.
Well produced and written in a pleasing style, it is a rich source of information about late-medieval calendar customs whose scope extends far beyond the Middle Ages. Stations of the Sun belongs in the reference collection of any college library.
Hutton attempts in a highly readable text that will serve the scholar and general reader alike to provide the first truly complete survey of the history of communal, seasonal rites and customs. To do this he pieced together vast quantities of raw material ... In this engaging exploration his work will be useful to students of popular culture and literature, folklorists, historians, and even the old-fashioned enthusiast.
absorbing study
a scholarly work meticulously detailing the origins of every traditional holiday or ritual day in Britain's history ... As a historical document, the breadth of detail is gripping, but as an exploration of British beliefs over the millenium about to go forever, it's unmissable.
an exhaustive account of the traditions and rituals practised in the British Isles from time immemorial to the present
Hutton's work is not dry as dust but of a piece with the ever-expanding purlieux of social history. He does not string out paragraphs upon a modicum of fact. Each is fertile with detail ... this elegantly produced and remarkably cheap volume will find an honoured place in the library of every self-respecting New Age caravan that is Glastonbury-bound, and, elsewhere, it will command a sale well beyond the run-up to Christmas once known as Advent.
The Stations of the Sun is a dedicated, meticulous piece of research.
scholarly, readable history of British seasonal rituals ... Hutton takes us informatively through "the ritual year", from Christmas to Bonfire Night
he seeks ... to put the record straight rather than stir up controversy for the sake of it, and has prduced a work that will be respected for its temperate argument and its prodigious research. From Christmas to Hallowe'en, there is barely a ritual or a custom that escapes his eye in the most detailed book of its kind ever written.
Ronald Hutton's splendid new book is a comprehensive history of the customs and beliefs whch constitute the ritual year in Britain ... it is a tour de force, from one of the livelist and most wide-ranging of practising English historians ... this is a historical encyclopaedia, unfailingly informative and stimulating; but a connecting thread does run through the book ... This is a welcome work of demystification, bringing the cold light of historical inquiry to bear on an area which has been surrounded with a good deal of pseudo-science and sheer gobbledegook ... this is a marvellously detailed exploration of a now familiar historical pheomenon, the invention of "tradition" ... unfailingly stimulating, learned and engaging book, which places a relatively neglected aspect of English social history firmly on the map.
uncovers a mass of fascinating material about rites and festivals, showing how irrepressible such inventiveness remains in spite of globalised entertainment
He has made an immense, unequalled trawl of documentary records throughout the island. Supported by this and by his previous books on pagan religion and the ritual year, he expounds the subject with greater authority and evidence than anyone before. He presents us with important, even startling, new facts. This is a rich, delightful and stimulating book for browsing, study or reference.
this meticulously argued, painstakingly documented and often fascinating book provides a rich historical analysis of the development of the non-Christian (but also non-pagan) aspects of contemporary festivals
He achieves a great deal as each section, treated in turn with a major calendar festival, ritual or customary period, is a mini-history complete in itself. ... Hutton's studies are well-integrated and produce a coherent whole. ... The Stations of the Sun provides the fullest and most important study yet of British calendar customs. ... Thanks to his work, we are able to recover the full significance of this particular customary period in the British calendar - the ripening of the corn.
Notă biografică
Ronald Hutton is Professor of History at the University of Bristol. He is the author of The Rise and Fall of Merry England (OUP 1994) and Charles II: King of England, Scotland, and Ireland (OUP, 1989; OPB,1991).