God Audiolibro Por Francesca Stavrakopoulou arte de portada

God

An Anatomy - As heard on Radio 4

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God

De: Francesca Stavrakopoulou
Narrado por: Francesca Stavrakopoulou
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Winner of The PEN Hessell-Tiltman Prize 2022
Shortlisted for The Wolfson History Prize 2022
A The Times Books of the Year 2022


Three thousand years ago, in the Southwest Asian lands we now call Israel and Palestine, a group of people worshipped a complex pantheon of deities, led by a father god called El. El had seventy children, who were gods in their own right. One of them was a minor storm deity, known as Yahweh. Yahweh had a body, a wife, offspring and colleagues. He fought monsters and mortals. He gorged on food and wine, wrote books, and took walks and naps. But he would become something far larger and far more abstract: the God of the great monotheistic religions.

But as Professor Francesca Stavrakopoulou reveals, God’s cultural DNA stretches back centuries before the Bible was written, and persists in the tics and twitches of our own society, whether we are believers or not. The Bible has shaped our ideas about God and religion, but also our cultural preferences about human existence and experience; our concept of life and death; our attitude to sex and gender; our habits of eating and drinking; our understanding of history. Examining God’s body, from his head to his hands, feet and genitals, she shows how the Western idea of God developed. She explores the places and artefacts that shaped our view of this singular God and the ancient religions and societies of the biblical world. And in doing so she analyses not only the origins of our oldest monotheistic religions, but also the origins of Western culture.

Beautifully written, passionately argued and frequently controversial, God: An Anatomy is cultural history on a grand scale.

'Rivetingly fresh and stunning' – Sunday Times
'One of the most remarkable historians and communicators working today' – Dan Snow

Antiguo Biblias y Estudio de la Biblia Cristianismo Estudio de la Biblia Estudios Religiosos Historia Historia y Cultura Bíblica Oriente Medio

Reseñas de la Crítica

A learned but rollicking journey through every aspect of Yahweh's body. A book that will offend some but delight more.
Lively . . . [with] a wealth of scholarly detail and much gusto (Rowan Williams)

Rivetingly fresh and stunning . . . I rather like this inexhaustibly powerful, shouting, bearded giant of a God, a fiery, fierce and startlingly “pagan” God, alive to his very fingertips, laughing at human hubris and singing with unbridled joy.

(Christopher Hart)
A marvelous conspectus of references to the divine body in ancient southwest Asian texts. But more than this, it is about recalibrating our understanding of these difficult texts to better understand ourselves. (Simon Yarrow)
Professors of Theology are imagined to be dull, gentle souls. This book, however, is a great rebel shout . . . A book that aims to upend the notion of a cloudy, spiritualised creator . . . instructive, vivid and frequently hilarious.

Stavrakopoulou is no literalist — indeed, she’s an atheist — but she maintains that her reading makes far more sense than the traditional ones, and her confident tone never falters.

(Dan Hitchens)
God: An Anatomy is a tour de force. Stavrakopoulou has created not just an extraordinarily rich and nuanced portrait of Yahweh himself, but an intricate and detailed account of the cultural values and practices he embodied, and the wider world of myth and history out of which he emerged . . . Stavrakopoulou has taken to heart the biblical injunction to seek the face of God, and what emerges is a deity more terrifyingly alive, more damaged, more compelling, more complex than we have encountered before. More human, you might say. (Mathew Lyons)
A detailed and scrupulously researched book . . . packed with knowledge and insight (Karen Armstrong)
Boldly simple in concept, God: An Anatomy is stunning in its execution. It is a tour de force, a triumph, and I write this as one who disagrees with Stavrakopoulou both on broad theoretical grounds and one who finds himself engaged with her in one narrow textual spat after another . . . A stunning book. (Jack Miles)
The sheer amount of primary evidence examined is staggering . . . Stavrakopoulou’s argumentation is intellectually penetrating, analytically robust, and sophisticated . . . Stavrakopoulou’s book, and her public-facing scholarship, demonstrate what makes an outstanding biblical scholar.
Good Lord, Stavrakopoulou touches that sweet spot that is scholarly, funny, visceral and heavenly. A revelation. (Adam Rutherford, author of A Brief History of Everyone Who Ever Lived and How to Argue with a Racist)
One of the most remarkable historians and communicators working today. (Dan Snow)
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I really enjoyed this. Well written and packed full of information that most Christians wouldn't know.

It's sad that I probably couldn't get my mom to read this as think it will make the cognitive dissonance far too uncomfortable to bear.

There is no overt attack on Christianity or any religion in here, but the simple portrayal of how gods were made by us is is impossible to ignore. Well done 😁

Read this book if you want to know where it all came from. My only regret is not being able to see some of the pictures that would be in the physical book.

Enlightening!

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This book helps with understanding the bible. The true bible meanings are very far from today's chirstianity and this has been quite shocking for me, even if I considered myself 'detransitioned' from christianity. I recommend this book for open minded individuals

informative

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This will get you thinking and provide you with answers to your age-long questions.

Eye-opening stuff

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Informative. Provocative. Powerful. Unbridled truth displayed with fantastic writing and formidable flare. A MUST read.

Absolutely Brilliant

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Fascinating description of what a lot of people take for granted they know, but apparently do not know at all.

I wish more people read this

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A fresh perspective on the way Jewish and Christian people imagined God throughout history. It focuses on the human aspect, which seems strange from our Modern Era perspective, but which probably was and still is as important as the transcendental aspect of God in shaping human minds.
For the most part the book just presents the texts and historical contexts, so it should be interesting & accessible for readers of any belief system (including Christians, Atheists and pluralists).

A different view

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