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THE EVIL EYE OF HUMANS, ANIMALS, AND DEMONS IN SUMERIAN LITERATURE

In: Asian and African Studies, vol. 30, no. 1
Zacharias Kotzé Číslo ORCID

Details:

Year, pages: 2021, 53 - 74
Language: eng
Keywords:
Evil eye, Sumerian literature, cognitive linguistics
Article type: Sumerian Literature, Cognitive Linguistics
About article:
The widespread ancient belief in the deleterious powers of the eye as reflected in Sumerian literature has been largely neglected in recent research. It has even been suggested that the belief system, though common in the ancient Mediterranean and Near East, was foreign to the ancient Sumerians. While Thomsen suggested that the evil eye was limited to humans, other scholars have argued that the evil eye was only associated with divinities in Sumerian literature. This study focuses on the conceptual content of linguistic expressions relating to the eye of humans, animals, and demons in order to demonstrate that much can still be learned about this complex belief system as it existed in ancient Mesopotamia when conceptual metaphors and metonymies for the evil eye are also taken into account.
How to cite:
ISO 690:
Kotzé, Z. 2021. THE EVIL EYE OF HUMANS, ANIMALS, AND DEMONS IN SUMERIAN LITERATURE. In Asian and African Studies, vol. 30, no.1, pp. 53-74. 1335-1257. DOI: https://doi.org/10.31577/aassav.2021.30.1.03

APA:
Kotzé, Z. (2021). THE EVIL EYE OF HUMANS, ANIMALS, AND DEMONS IN SUMERIAN LITERATURE. Asian and African Studies, 30(1), 53-74. 1335-1257. DOI: https://doi.org/10.31577/aassav.2021.30.1.03
About edition:
Publisher: Institute of Oriental Studies
Published: 28. 5. 2021
Rights:
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.