Throughout time, Egyptian sources display divergent attitudes towards violence expressing the belief that some situations of violence were positive and to be encouraged, while others were to be avoided. Sanctioned violence could be employed for a variety of reasons—the severity of which ranged from inflicting blows to gruesome death. Violence was part of the preternatural realm, notably as Egyptians attempted to thwart potential violence in the afterlife. While the average Egyptian was supposed to eschew violence, kings and their representatives were expected to engage in violent acts in many circumstances. Improper violence disturbed order while sanctioned violence restored it. While the types of sanctioned violence employed and the reason...
Violence has been part of the human history since its very beginning. As some believe, it is “Cain’s...
This paper looks at Mubarak's state violence as a paradigm for what Egyptian Ministers termed 'secur...
International audienceWhy do ancient Egyptian statues so often have their noses, hands, or genitals ...
Throughout time, Egyptian sources display divergent attitudes towards violence expressing the belief...
While many forms of violence against human beings are considered taboo, others are considered accept...
La violence interpersonnelle n’a encore jamais été globalement étudiée pour l’Égypte antique. Elle a...
Ancient Egypt is commonly regarded, in a simple comparative analysis, as a civilization less violent...
In ethnic violence research, scholars tend to lump together different forms of ethnic violence. Prom...
International audienceThrough the study of Egyptian documents from New Kingdom and Hellenistic Egypt...
Pharaonic Egypt’s highly unequal social organisation was maintained not only through the use of phys...
Based on the author's thesis (Ph. D.)--University of California, Los Angeles, 2003.Includes bibliogr...
I trace the shifting feelings of some of my close interlocutors in a low-income neighborhood in Cair...
Gender and violence intersected in ancient Egypt in many ways. In general, the ancient Egyptian gend...
«Single» sacred animals and «multiple» sacralised animals were a feature of Egyptian sanctuaries. Al...
International audienceThis paper deals with how and why violent deaths were used and justified, in s...
Violence has been part of the human history since its very beginning. As some believe, it is “Cain’s...
This paper looks at Mubarak's state violence as a paradigm for what Egyptian Ministers termed 'secur...
International audienceWhy do ancient Egyptian statues so often have their noses, hands, or genitals ...
Throughout time, Egyptian sources display divergent attitudes towards violence expressing the belief...
While many forms of violence against human beings are considered taboo, others are considered accept...
La violence interpersonnelle n’a encore jamais été globalement étudiée pour l’Égypte antique. Elle a...
Ancient Egypt is commonly regarded, in a simple comparative analysis, as a civilization less violent...
In ethnic violence research, scholars tend to lump together different forms of ethnic violence. Prom...
International audienceThrough the study of Egyptian documents from New Kingdom and Hellenistic Egypt...
Pharaonic Egypt’s highly unequal social organisation was maintained not only through the use of phys...
Based on the author's thesis (Ph. D.)--University of California, Los Angeles, 2003.Includes bibliogr...
I trace the shifting feelings of some of my close interlocutors in a low-income neighborhood in Cair...
Gender and violence intersected in ancient Egypt in many ways. In general, the ancient Egyptian gend...
«Single» sacred animals and «multiple» sacralised animals were a feature of Egyptian sanctuaries. Al...
International audienceThis paper deals with how and why violent deaths were used and justified, in s...
Violence has been part of the human history since its very beginning. As some believe, it is “Cain’s...
This paper looks at Mubarak's state violence as a paradigm for what Egyptian Ministers termed 'secur...
International audienceWhy do ancient Egyptian statues so often have their noses, hands, or genitals ...