01325nam--2200373---450-99000312341020331620080701094925.0978-88-498-1887-1000312341USA01000312341(ALEPH)000312341USA0100031234120080701d2007----km-y0itay50------baitaIT||||||||001yy<<La>> società aperta di Karl Popperle vicende editoriali di un'opera scritta tra difficoltà e accolta tra sospetti e ostilitàHubert Kiesewetter, Dario AntiseriSoveria MannelliRubbettino200791 p.21 cm20012001<<Die>> Entstehung von Karl R. Popper offener Gesellschaft und ihre Feinde26973Popper,Karl Raimund. La società aperta e i suoi nemiciBNCF320.5092KIESEWETTER,Hubert248419ANTISERI,Dario53664ITsalbcISBD990003123410203316II.5. 6148207310 L.M.II.5.00174551BKUMAALESSANDRA9020080701USA010939ALESSANDRA9020080701USA010949Entstehung von Karl R. Popper offener Gesellschaft und ihre Feinde26973UNISA02717nam 2200421 n 450 991061948020332120230221171540.097818032704561803270454(CKB)5700000000103421(NjHacI)995700000000103421(ScCtBLL)84e6fbf2-c3a0-46e7-b5ba-be75a1f9fafd(oapen)doab93067(EXLCZ)99570000000010342120230221d2022 uy 0engur|||||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierMatriarchy in Bronze Age Crete /Joan Marie CichonArchaeopress Publishing2022Oxford :Archaeopress Archaeology,2022.1 online resource (280 pages)9781803270449 1803270446 Matriarchy in Bronze Age Crete: A Perspective from Archaeomythology and Modern Matriarchal Studies offers a very different perspective of Crete than is usually found in academic writing; making a compelling case for a matriarchal Bronze Age Crete. Bronze Age Crete evokes for many the image of an exceptionally sophisticated civilization: peaceful, artistic, and refined; a society in which women were highly visible and important, and the supreme deity was a Goddess. Yet, despite the fact that authorities acknowledge that the preeminent deity of Crete was a Female Divine, and that women played a major role in Cretan society, there is a gap in the scholarly literature, and a lively, ongoing debate regarding the centrality of women and the existence of matriarchy in Bronze Age Crete. The purpose of this work is to fill that gap, and to advance the debate over whether or not ancient Crete was a woman-centered and matriarchal society toward a more complex, detailed, and certain conclusion. To that end this publication utilises the field of modern matriarchal studies, with its carefully elucidated definition of the term matriarchy, and employs the methodology of archaeomythology - the use of historical, mythological, linguistic, and folkloric as well as archaeological sources. Given its scope, the volume will be of interest to scholars and students in the fields encompassed by archaeomythology, as well as the fields of women's studies, women's history, women's spirituality, and modern matriarchal studies.Matriarchy in Bronze Age CreteMatriarchyMatriarchy.301.421Cichon Joan Marie1279719NjHacINjHaclBOOK9910619480203321Matriarchy in Bronze Age Crete3015892UNINA