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Bruce Lincoln is the Caroline E. Haskell Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus of the History of Religions in the Divinity School at the University of Chicago, where he also holds positions in the Center for Middle Eastern Studies and on the Committee on Medieval Studies, with affiliations in the Departments of Anthropology and Classics. Recent books include Between History and Myth: Stories of Harald Fairhairand the Founding of the State and Gods andDemons, Priests and Scholars: Critical Explorations in the History of Religions, both published by the University of Chicago Press.
"Gathered here is the fruit of Bruce Lincoln's decades-long
engagement in cross-cultural comparison in what he describes as its
preferred "weak" mode. But more than demonstrations of this style
of comparison, Lincoln's efforts are also theoretically suggestive,
showing how in many different ways, for him, comparison is an
'indispensable instrument of human thought.' As a polemic, as well,
Lincoln's efforts fly irreverently in the face of much of
unthinking, trendoid dismissals of this essential human cognitive
act. A much welcomed tonic for the malaise of parochialism
afflicting the study of religion today."--Ivan Strenski, University
of California, Riverside "Lincoln's brilliant and learned book
reflects a rare and convincing effort to renew the classical
comparative approach to religious phenomena, by establishing it on
a new basis. Side by side with representing a truly novel and
sophisticated contribution to the study of ancient religions, it
offers us a beautiful stroll through some of the most curious
landscapes of modern scholarship."--Guy G. Stroumsa, Hebrew
University of Jerusalem and University of Oxford "Bruce Lincoln's
argument for weak comparisons, developed with amazing erudition and
great methodological subtlety, will be a scholarly point of
reference in the years to come. The section on the ancient
Scythians is a jewel. An indispensable book."--Carlo Ginzburg,
University of California, Los Angeles "Combining bracing critique
and scrupulously pursued case studies, Apples and Oranges ranges
from the history of studies of 'religion, ' to the Spanish Civil
War, to Beowulf, to Herodotus' Scythians, and the Lakota Ghost
Dance, and urges what Lincoln calls 'weak' comparison, fortified in
his case by dazzling erudition and an unfailing ethical commitment.
Lincoln includes a critique of 'recursive apocalypticism, ' as in
the exhortation to make America great 'again.' Inspiring and
persuasive, this is the work of a great scholar at the height of
his powers."--Page duBois, University of California, San Diego "A
persuasive argument for fine-grained historical and cross-cultural
comparisons. At the same time, by an eruditie scholarly critique of
ruling ideologies, Bruce Lincoln gives new meaning to speaking
truth to power."
--Marshall Sahlins, University of Chicago
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