Used price: $2.15
Buy one from zShops for: $8.31
Collectible price: $14.99
1. A long, and vastly incorrect, discourse on how the People of the East are all sexual libertines and how the West, corrupted by Christianity, needs to catch up and return to its pre-Christian fornicating glory.
2. A lengthy description of Kabbalic mysticism as an incorrect representation of how most Jews view sexual behavior.
3. A petty chapter on Islam that goes into Rumi and little else.
4. Silly-looking prurient illustrations of Egyptian gods and goddesses engaged in various copulative acts.
What I found was just the opposite: a good, well-researched, complete, and far-from-prurient description of how every major world religion addresses the issue of sex. The descriptions of Hindu and Buddhist sexual ethos are (near as I can tell) completely on-target, there is virtually no Christianity-bashing, and the Kabbalah is relegated to the last four pages of a lengthy and enlightening chapter on Judaism.
On the other hand, this little book is far from dull -- not for the reasons you might expect, but because Parrinder writes with a breezy "I'm just writing this" style that makes this very solid work of scholarship into an equally solid example of cheery bedtime reading. Highly recommended.
Used price: $9.49
Buy one from zShops for: $9.72
The writer doesnot use a rival approach, he tries to make the reader understand the reason behind certain practices and therefore the reader can use this book to widen his scope of the world cultures and as a stepping stone to a more detailed reading in the subject.
As you read you come to understand that sexual practices incorporated in religious rules arise generally from the need to reproduce and to protect the child in a world full of hazards for the weak. You also understand that regarding the woman as inferior is a practice deeply rooted in the world's cultures through centuries, and that the enlightenment of today may only be an initial step for women in a struggle to be regarded as equals.
I highly recommend this book to people curious about what is going on in the world, and why.
The ghosts of ancestors whose names are remembered are also venerated. Gifts of food, and other signs of respect, honor the place the recently-deceased continue to hold in the family and society.
The practices of fortunetellers and diviners are also discussed. The religious practices of various devotional centers, called houses of a god, feature the ritual death and rebirth of devotees. Throughout West Africa, spiritual vocation means becoming a new person. Scarification and learning a new language are often part of starting a new spiritual life.
The concepts and practices considered by Parrinder offer fascinating insights into West African theology. A good companion work would be Parrinder's excellent West African Psychology. Dominique Zahan's The Religion, Spirituality and Thought of Traditional Africa is also an excellent study. The perspectives are different; for example, Zahan mainly considers ethnic groups in French-speaking Africa, whereas Parrinder concentrates on English-speaking areas of West Africa.
However, his book contains several errors, presumably as his opinions were based predominantly on the interpretation of the Qur'an by non-native Arabic speaking persons. Certain conclusions made, especially with regards to Muhammad, Jesus and the Christian doctrine of the holy trinity as set out in the Qur'an, were ill researched and factually incorrect.
I would recommend readers to practice caution in reading this book and making conclusions based purely on it.
Used price: $2.98
Collectible price: $13.76
As the author points out, one troubling feature of African mythology is that they did not usually write anything down, but instead passed on their stories orally. The author blames this lack of written word on the geographical isolation that discouraged its spread. But he also points out that the absence of writing was also a characteristic of ancient American civilizations and the ancient Britons and Teutons. The author therefore relies on the research and recordings of modern African scholars who painstakingly wrote down the stories told them by the various peoples.
A culture of course needs more than just verbalization to express its ideas and moods. To capture and sustain an idea in time without writing, one can use art, particularly in paintings and sculpture. The author argues that African art is deliberately expressive and was employed to symbolize the life in every aspect. Interestingly, the author holds that African proverbs and myths expressed joy in life and human activity. Calling it a 'world-affirming' philosophy, in which life on earth is thought of as good, despite human suffering. The Africans were surely correct about this. Absolutely for sure.
The reader will also learn that nearly all African peoples believe in a supreme being, who created all things. Some of the names of this being include Mulungu in East Africa, Leza in central Africa, and Nyambe in the west. And the author points out, interestingly, that very few temples were built to the "supreme" god, while places of worship were built for the lesser deities and ancestors. "God is too great to be contained in a house" say the Africans. Also interesting is that the Africans did not have a god of Sun, for such a god was not needed: there is plenty of sun in Africa. In some African myths, god created the earth in four days, a fifth day being reserved for worship. God also created a mountain with the power of speech, so as to allow the people to hear the divine voice and laws. Dreaming was considered a gift from God, and it functioned as a sequence of messages from God. But witchcraft was believed in also, with women again being the chief practioners.
Man was not the first to create fire, say some Pygmy legends. Rather, it was chimpanzees who first possessed it, and a Pygmy stumbled across their fire accidently and wearing a long bark-cloth, caught it on fire and ran for home. Thus the origin of fire for man.
The god of some African myths used to live on Earth, but left due to some human fault. Others speak of a Golden Age, in which god left willingly. God leaves paradise, and not the humans, for some of the African legends. Also, death was not considered natural in some African myths. It got its start from a dog or a chameleon. The author gives several other fascinating accounts of the African conception of death, including a story very similar to Pandora's Box. Curiosity in many cultures is considered the origin of all evil and suffering, unfortunately.
Used price: $8.98
Buy one from zShops for: $15.95
Used price: $49.95
Even if you have another version of the bookI highly recommend this addition. Wonderful.