Canaäd

Canaäd

by D. A. Wood
Canaäd

Canaäd

by D. A. Wood

eBook

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Overview

"Gods against gods, men against men, each kind / against each other: Who is in the right? / Truly, which ones could ever conquer Death?" So Laeya--the Canaanite goddess Athirat masked in human form--asks after a crucial battle. Situated in the interimperial turmoil of the Late Bronze Age, Canaad follows this heroine's journey as it dovetails with that of Aqhat, a refugee from the Levantine coast. After tragedy casts Aqhat into the desert, a prophecy affords him the opportunity to slay three deities before the year's end and thereby become divine himself. Determined to right the wrongs of those responsible for his community's suffering, he and his companions join forces with Laeya, setting out to permanently revolutionize how mortals and gods interrelate--with consequences that even the gods cannot fathom. At once a speculative and historically attuned study of religion, Canaad brings the Ancient Near East to life in tangible and dramatic form, weaving together largely unknown histories and numerous fragmentary myths from a Canaanite perspective.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781666760064
Publisher: Resource Publications
Publication date: 12/20/2022
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 650
File size: 4 MB

About the Author

D. A. Wood is a researcher and writer who teaches philosophy at Xavier and Dillard universities in New Orleans. He is the editor and translator of Amílcar Cabral’s Resistance and Decolonization and the author of Epistemic Decolonization, among other articles on philosophy, politics, and religion.

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From the Publisher

“D. A. Wood prefaces his exquisitely wrought epic poem with the conceit—or perhaps the conviction—that he is heir to a translation whose original, through theft and inadvertence, has been lost. Canaäd translates, by way of informed imagination, the lost religion of the Canaanites. Think of it as the prequel to the religion of Yahweh. But in place of a triumphalist monotheism, Wood paints the pathos of single-parent theism. Canaäd is a mythopoetic masterpiece.”

—James Wetzel, professor of philosophy, Villanova University

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