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  1. The World’s Oldest Living Proverb Discovered Thriving in Ethiopia
    Autor*in: Unseth, Peter
    Erschienen: 2019
    Verlag:  Universität Hamburg, Hiob Ludolf Centre for Ethiopian and Eritrean Studies

    The world’s oldest living proverb, from around 3,800 years ago, is found on a tablet from the Assyrian empire. The proverb has been documented from later eras, northwest from the Middle East up into Europe, as far northwestas Britain. Evidence is... mehr

     

    The world’s oldest living proverb, from around 3,800 years ago, is found on a tablet from the Assyrian empire. The proverb has been documented from later eras, northwest from the Middle East up into Europe, as far northwestas Britain. Evidence is given here now demonstrating that the proverb is also found to the south of the Middle East, in Ethiopia. In some places, a cat is substituted for the dog, but the Ethiopian evidence indicates that the dog version of the proverb is original.

     

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    Quelle: BASE Fachausschnitt AVL
    Sprache: Englisch
    Medientyp: Aufsatz aus einer Zeitschrift
    Format: Online
    Übergeordneter Titel: Aethiopica; Bd. 21 (2018); 226–236 ; Aethiopica; Vol. 21 (2018); 226–236 ; 2194-4024 ; 1430-1938 ; 10.15460/aethiopica.21.0
    DDC Klassifikation: Sprache (400); Hellenische Literaturen; Klassische griechische Literatur (880)
    Schlagworte: hasty bitch; Alaaba; Guji Oromo; Nuer
    Lizenz:

    Copyright (c) 2019 Peter Unseth

  2. Negotiating the sounds of born-again christianity: aesthetic provocations in western Ethiopia
    Autor*in: Gidron, Yotam
    Erschienen: 2021

    This paper discusses the role of hymns and musical practices in the articulation of Christian subjectivities among Nuer communities in western Ethiopia. It examines how the members of two fundamentalist born-again groups responded to the... mehr

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    This paper discusses the role of hymns and musical practices in the articulation of Christian subjectivities among Nuer communities in western Ethiopia. It examines how the members of two fundamentalist born-again groups responded to the Pentecostalization of the local Christian soundscape over the past two decades, focusing on the distinct approaches they adopted for the production and performance of hymns and the authorization of Christian music. Born-again musical practices, it is argued, take shape through a constant process of public argumentation, fuelled by a ceaseless quest for divine authenticity. Believers from different churches are therefore engaged not in destructive conflicts over the domination of public spaces, as some accounts of tensions over religious sound from elsewhere in Africa may suggest, but in constant provocations and debates that are both of a productive nature and inherent to the endless political project of born-again subjectivation.

     

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    Quelle: Verbundkataloge
    Sprache: Englisch
    Medientyp: Aufsatz aus einer Zeitschrift
    Format: Online
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    Übergeordneter Titel: Enthalten in: Material religion; Abingdon : Taylor & Francis, 2005; 17(2021), 4, Seite 490-516; Online-Ressource

    Schlagworte: sound; Messianic Judaism; Seventh-day Adventism; Pentecostalism; Nuer; Ethiopia