Artemis
Gods and heroes of the ancient world
Stephanie Lynn Budin
184 Pages, ISBN 978 0 367 00100 1
Published by Routledge, 2016
"Stephanie Budin's Artemis is a richly detailed and engaging study
that offers a welcome contribution to the fields of Greek religion and
mythology. Expertly weaving together evidence from literary texts and
inscriptions, archaeology and the visual arts, Budin uncovers the many
meanings and layers of Artemis through her origin stories, her iconic
roles as virgin and huntress, and her mediating function as a goddess of
critical female transitions. With the passion and wit of a great teacher,
Budin convincingly demonstrates that the worship of Artemis was truly a
life-or-death matter for the ancient Greeks."
- Monica S. Cyrino, University of New Mecico
Artemis is a literary, iconographic, and archaeological study of the
ancient Greek goddess of the hunt, who presided over the transitions
and mediations between the wild and the civilized, youth and maturity,
life and death. Beginning with a study of the early origins of Artemis and her
cult in the Bronze and Archaic Ages, Budin explores the goddess' persona
and her role in the lives of her worshippers.
This volume examines her birth and childhood, her place in the divine family,
her virginity, and her associations with those places where the wilds become
the "cities of just men." The focus then turns to Artemis' role in the lives of
children and women, particularly how she helps them navigate the transition
to adulthood and, perhaps too often, death. Budin goes on to reconsider
some of the more harrowing aspects of Artemis`' mythology, such as plague
and bloodshed, while also examining some of her kinder, oft overlooked
associations. Finally, the role of Artemis in the Renaissance and modern
society is addressed, from the on-going fascination with the "breasts" on the
statue of Artemis of Ephesos to the Artemisian aspects of Katniss Everdeen,
from the Hunger Games trilogy.
Written in an accessible style, Artemis is a crucial resource for
students not only of Greek myth, religion and cult, but also those seeking to
understand the lives and roles of girls and women in ancient Greece, as this
goddess presided over their significant milestones, from maiden to wife to mother.
Stephanie Lynn Budin is an ancient historian who focusses on ancient
Greece and the Near East. Her published works include Images of Woman
and Child from the Bronze Age (2011), The Ancient Greece: An introduction
(2009), The Myth of Sacred Prostitution in Antiquity (2008) and The Origin
of Aphrodite (2003), as well as numerous articles on ancient religion and iconography.
(The text above comes from the back of the book)
This book can be purchased at www.Routledge.com.
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