The tomb of Nyhetep-Ptah at Giza and the tomb of 'Ankhm'ahor at Saqqara.
: Includes bibliographical referencesn and index : IX, 61, [90] S. Ill., graph. Darst. 31cm : Berkeley/(Calif. [u.a.]): Univ. of California Pr. 1978 IX, 61 S., 90 gez. Taf. 4 (Univ. of California Publications. Occasional papers. 11 = Archaeology.). : 052-009-5758
Newsletter, Number 88 (WINTER 1974)
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CONTENTS:
Edward L. B. Terrace 1936-1973--
Notes from Princeton--
ARCE Membership--
Publications University Museum, University of Pennsylvania, Excavations at Malkata / by Barry J. Kemp--
Ostracon Cairo 25218 augmented by Ostracon Deir el Medinah 1266 / by John L. Foster--
La Missione Archeologica in Egitto, Della Universita di Roma / by Sergio Donadoni--
Honorary Members--
Notes on Activities in Egypt--
The Center’s Guest Book--
Minutes of 1973 Annual Meeting--
Abstract--
PHOTOGRAPHS ARCE Fellows 1973-74--
Annual Meeting, Oriental Institute.
Theology and the First Theory of Sacrifice.
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Are social scientific theories and confessional theologies of sacrifice equally well suited as public discourse about religion? The French liberal Protestant theologians of the 5th Section of the École Pratique and the French doyen of sociology, Émile Durkheim and his two main followers, Henri Hubert and Marcel Mauss, engage in a struggle over the proper approach to sacrifice in the public university. The Durkheimians argued that theological language and assumptions were inappropriate for this purpose because of their confessional allegiances. Another approach to sacrifice, free of confessional entanglements, was required. This is what Hubert and Mauss sought to provide in the Sacrifice: Its Nature and Function.
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1 online resource. :
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