Religion and Humanity in Mesopotamian Myth and Epic
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30. Tzvi Abusch
, “Sacrifice in Sacrifice in Mesopotamia,” in
Sacrifice in Religious Experience
, ed. Albert I. Baumgarten
(Leiden, The Netherlands: Brill, 2002), 44.
31. Gwendolyn Leick
, “Sexuality and Religion in Mesopotamia,”
Religion Compass
2.2 (2008): 119–133.
32. Jean Bottéro,
Au commencement étaient les dieux
(Paris: Tallander, 2004), 95.
33. Louise M. Pryke,
Ishtar
(London: Routledge, 2017).
34. Sexual violence in
Enki and Ninhursaga
has been considered in detail by Alhena Gadotti
, “Why It Was Rape: The
Conceptualization of Rape in Sumerian Literature,”
Journal of the American Oriental Society
129.1 (2009): 73–82
.
Gadotti sees Enki’s first three sexual encounters as rape, but the experience with Uttu as a “failed sexual encounter,”
76.
35.
The complicated nature of Uttu’s parental involvement with the plants that result from her encounter with Enki is
considered by Dickson, and considered to be not “really” pregnancy.
Keith Dickson
, “Enki and Ninhursag: The
Trickster in Paradise,”
Journal of Near Eastern Studies
66.1 (2007): 20–21.
36. Dina Katz
, “Enki and Ninhursaga, Part 2: The Story of Enki and Ninhursaga,”
Bibliotheca Orientalis
65 (2008): 331–
332.
37. JoAnn Scurlock
, “But Was She Raped? A Verdict through Comparison,”
NIN
4 (2003): 103.
38.
Gadotti, “Why it was Rape.”
39.
Sasson, “Comparative Observations, 220.
40. Caitlin Barrett
, “Was Dust Their Food and Clay Their Bread? Grave Goods, the Mesopotamian Afterlife, and the
Liminal Role of Inana/Ishtar,”
Journal of Ancient Near Eastern Religions
7 (2007): 54.
41. Dina Katz,
The Image of the Netherworld in the Sumerian Sources
(Bethesda, MD: CDL Press, 2003), 235.
42.
Gilgamesh, Enkidu and the nether world
,
ETCSL 1.8.1.4
.
43. JoAnn Scurlock
, “Death and the Afterlife in Ancient Mesopotamian Thought,” in
Civilizations of the Ancient Near
East
, ed. Jack M. Sasson (New York: Simon & Schuster Macmillan, 1995), vol. 1, 1892.
44. Cristiano Grottanelli and Pietro Mander
, “Kingship: Kingship in the Ancient Mediterranean World,” in
Encyclopedia
of Religion
, ed. Lindsay Jones (2d ed.; Detroit: Macmillan Reference USA, 2005), 5163.
45. Jeffrey H. Tigay,
The Evolution of the Gilgamesh Epic
(Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1982), 13–16.
46. Scott Noegel
, “Mesopotamian Epic,” in
A Companion to Ancient Epic
, ed. John Miles Foley (Malden, MA: Blackwell,
2005), 242.
47.
Noegel, “Mesopotamian Epic,” 238.
48. Sasson has noted that ancient Near Eastern myths and epics share this tendency to blend historical (or ahistorical)
features with fantastical or supernatural elements. See Sasson, “Comparative Observations,” 220.
49. Herman L. J. Vanstiphout
, “Enmerkar’s Invention of Writing Revisited,” in
DUMU-E -DUB-BA-A: Studies in Honor of
Åke W. Sjöberg
2
, ed. Hermann Behrens, Darlene M. Loding and Martha T. Roth (Philadelphia: Samuel Noah Kramer
Fund, University Museum, 1989), 522–524.
50. Sagburu is noted by Gadotti as one of very few women mentioned by name in the Old Babylonian Sumerian
literary corpus. Alhena Gadotti
, “Portraits of the Feminine in Sumerian Literature,”
Journal of American Oriental
Society
131.2 (2011): 196.
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