Goddesses in Context: On Divine Powers, Roles, Relationships and Gender in Mesopotamian Textual and Visual Sources
OBO 259,
Fribourg, Göttingen: Academic Press, Vandenhoeck and Ruprecht.
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The present publication is divided into five chapters about gender of divinities: 1) Gender Theory and Issues (gender categories, changing gender, marginalization of goddesses); 2) Plethora of Female Deities (processes of syncretism, fusion, fission and mutation; first stage of profusion followed by a second stage of recession and by a third one of conflation; general trends); 3) Facets of Change (the case of Ninḫursaĝa and mythological messages); 4) Images (image and religion; visualizing deities; statues, terra-cotta figurines, seals and their role in visualization; power of presence); 5) Epilogue (summary of the previous chapters).
Urkesh is specifically referred to on p. 71, n. 285, with the mention of the Hurrian inscription of Tišatal (from Tell Mozan) which quotes dNIN-na-gar3ki among other Hurrian deities (see Wilhelm 1998, in Mozan Studies 3, pp. 117-143).
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