Through the Face of the Dead: Constructing Totemic Identity in Early Neolithic Egypt and the Near East

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Publicado en:Religions vol. 16, no. 10 (2025), p. 1312-1331
Autor principal: Muñoz Herrera Antonio
Publicado:
MDPI AG
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Acceso en línea:Citation/Abstract
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Resumen:This study examines the construction of individual and collective identity in pre-Neolithic Egypt and the Levant through the post mortem manipulation of human remains. Focusing on funerary rituals and skull reuse, interpreted using recent anthropological theory frameworks, we propose a totemic framework of ontological identity, in which clans associated with specific animals structured their ritual and spatial practices. Based on archaeological, taphonomic, and ethnohistorical evidence, it is possible to identify how these practices reflect clan-based social units, seasonal mobility, and a reciprocal relationship with the environment, integrating corporeal and mental continuity. Plastered skulls in the Levant acted as intergenerational anchors of communal memory, while early Egyptian dismemberment practices predate the standardization of mummification and reveal the function of some structures of pre-Neolithic sanctuaries. By interpreting these mortuary rituals, we argue that selective body treatment served as a deliberate mechanism to reinforce totemic identity, transmit ancestry, and mediate ontological transitions in response to sedentarization and environmental change.
ISSN:2077-1444
DOI:10.3390/rel16101312
Fuente:Religion Collection