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The Rape of Persephone: A Greek Scenario of Women's Initiation
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 June 2011
Extract
Within the last fifteen years, scholars have shown considerable interest in the ritual life of women in antiquity, and have been particularly successful in recognizing the traces of women's initiatory rituals in various Greek and Roman ceremonies and myths. With regard to the Greek materials, the Arrephoria and Brauronia festivals have been treated in this light, as have two ceremonies in which details of the Demeter-Persephone mythos were reenacted: the Thesmophoria and the Haloa.
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References
1 For the Roman materials, see especially Gagé, J., Matronalia (Brussels: Collection Latomus, 1963)Google Scholar; for the Greek, Brelich, Angelo, Paides e Parthenoi (Rome: Ateneo, 1969) vol. 1.Google Scholar
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39 Kerenyi, Eleusis, 137ff.
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44 Provisionally titled Emerging from the Chrysalis: Studies in Rituals of Women's Initiation (Cambridge: Harvard University, to appear in 1981).Google Scholar
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46 On the probability that the appearance of Persephone constituted the final revelation at Eleusis, see Otto, “Meaning of the Eleusinian Mysteries,” 83f.; Eliade, Histoire des Croyances el des idées religieuses, 1. 312.
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