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Rating:  Summary: A Fascinating Classic Review: Although published in the early 1900s and outdated in certain areas, Prolegomena to the Study of Greek Religion is still an essential read for anyone interested in Greek Religion. Perhaps the best description of the book would be to call it the Greek Golden Bough. In this classic work, Harrison sought to uncover the primitive substratum of Greek religion, so rather than focusing on the Olympian deities, she spends the better part of the book discussing ghosts, 'demons', and the chthonic deities. The religious landscape that she illuminates is therefore nothing like the cheery and rational world of the Olympians. The dark, the creepy and the uncanny tend to predominate. The book is very well-written, and the author's fascination with her material is infectious. I found it so powerful a reading experience that I can only describe Prolegomena in terms of a kind of anthropological prose poetry. Although its ostensible topic is a rather specialized and obscure field of enquiry, one comes away from the book with a feeling of having gained a deeper insight into that most general of topics, the human condition. I have to agree with the other reviewer who emphasizes that this is not a book for those completely unfamiliar with ancient Greek religion. Moreover, parts of it might be frustrating and tedious for readers without knowledge of the ancient Greek language, since Harrison is constantly engaged in the elucidiation and discussion of Greek religious terminology. All in all, an unforgettable book that, unlike most academic studies, is a piece of great literature.
Rating:  Summary: Excellent Detailed Information Review: I was searching for an answer to the mystery that was in the Greek Mysteries. Harrison provides the answers. Prolegomena provides a very detailed account of the Mysteries that are rooted in worship of the the Chthonic (Earth) Gods that preceded the Olympian deities. The reading level of this book is probably the most difficult I have ever experienced in a book that I am reading purely for pleasure. You must have a burning interest in the field of ancient Greek religion to be able to appreciate this book for the great work it is. Jaime Gomez
Rating:  Summary: Indispensible classic Review: This book is an indispensible classic for anybody interested in Greek religion. I was considering following up Prof. Harrison's weighty tome by writing the sequel: "Avgolemeno to the Study of Greek Soup Making," but I couldn't find an interested publisher, for some reason. *Note: "Avgolemeno" is a well-known Greek, lemon-flavored soup.
Rating:  Summary: A massive, awe-inspiring and indispensable book. Review: This is no easy reading, and it is not for people totally without basic knowledge. Harrison, a great scholar who wrote in the 20s, won't tell you who Athena is- you should have a basic idea in order to enjoy the complex stories about her and all the Olympian deities! We didn't get the background told at school, only the stage when belief in the Gods was actually dead, preserved only as a cultural phenomenon. Harrison will tell you about the time when belief was ALIVE. If you want to know about the ceremonies, the secret rites, the hidden names, the shift of power from goddess to god... and in all this in a factual, reliable manner- then this is the book you should read!
Rating:  Summary: Don't be deceived by all the glowing reviews Review: Why this book is so celebrated is beyond me. I found Harrison's much vaunted prose to be somewhere between pretentious and soporific. The work itself is now outdated and compromised by the explosion of classical research in the last century. I'd also like to mention the copy I purchased is defective - about thirty pages are simply missing somewhere in the middle of the book.
If you want to read the book, read it for free in the library. Then you'll only be wasting your time instead of your money.
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