The Language of the Goddess

by Marija Gimbutas

On This Page

Description

History of religious symbols about the dominance of the Great Goddess based on archeological finds and art.

Tags

Recommendations

Member Recommendations

Member Reviews

8 reviews
I bought this book last year, after winning Harald Haarmann's Roots of Ancient Greek Civilization as an Early Reviewer. Haarmann, based on linguistic studies, argues that "Old Europe" – the peoples of Europe prior to the arrival of Indo-Europeans – significantly influenced the language and culture of the Indo-European arrivistes. Haarmann's study of paleo-Greek linguistics was superb, and Haarmann expressed his own admiration for the archeomythological work of Marija Gimbutas.

I gave Haarmann's Roots of Ancient Greek Civilization 5***** but I'm giving Gimbutas's Language of the Goddess 3½***. I have some skepticism of Haarmann's view of "Old Europe" as an Edenic paradise, but that's a relatively minor flaw that isn't overemphasized show more by Haarmann. In contrast, Gimbutas too often reads like "New Age" speculation.

Additionally, Haarmann's study is based on very specific linguistic analysis while Gimbutas goes "all over the place" with interpretations of pottery and statuary designs that tend, in my view, to be far too speculative given our limited knowledge of "Old Europe" and its cult of the Goddess. In fact, I wonder if there even was a single Goddess cult as opposed to a multiplicity of cultic practices.

This particular book is lavish in its design and very generously illustrated. Some might even complain that it approaches the "coffee table" level, but I found Gimbutas's illustrations and photographs very appropriate and demonstrate her vast command of the factual evidence (as opposed, however, to the conclusions which she draws, which tend toward the speculative).

Caution: Despite its highly pictorial nature, this book is not a quick read and you should expect to read just a couple or three short chapters at a time if you don't want to be overwhelmed in details.
show less
½
There is one good reason to own this book - the illustrations and, I suppose, the reference material at the back but it is not to be taken seriously theoretically.

Gimbutas was a romantic eccentric, part of whose importance is that she fuelled the rise of the matriarchal myth in feminism and in neo-paganism.

It must not be forgotten, however, that she was a serious academic and the flaw here is merely one of shifting from the evidence, rather imaginatively if inappropriately, to a 'grand narrative'.

The book thus leaps from probabalistic evidence-based social science to becoming part of a world of possibilian intellectual myth-making, of ideology, and eventually of the nonsense spouted by Californian earth mothers.

It is also the world of show more Campbell, Graves and Jung, and of the earnest desire to believe in lost Golden Ages, simplicity and better times ahead if we all, well, just believed that we were not as we are.

The book encapsulates this well. It is lavish and beautifully produced but it is also filled on page after page with assertions that simply cannot be justified by the data provided on the page.

There are huge leaps in time and space and the many ways to interpret a wavy line or a spiral are sacrificed to the demands of theory.

In the end, I found this book just plain sad. Vast amounts of intellectual labour and hard work have gone into something which is just as mythological as that which it purports to explain - lovely for non-dualist romantics with no sense of history but not taking the rest of us much further forward.

Worse, just as Marx did not intend the labour camps nor Jesus the Vatican, this book has spawned a very malign form of matriarchalism that enhances gender divisions and binary thinking.

Matriarchal feminism, like exaggerated rewritings of 'witch' history, creates an intellectual laziness in its followers and has introduced yet another reason for irrationalism in a world that badly needs critical thinking.

I have an immense amount of time for neo-paganism and magical thinking but these are weakened if they follow the religions of the book in perverting the past and the actualities of the human condition for 'religious effect'.

The high point of matriarchal feminism is probably now peaking with the narcissism of the decaying baby-boomers. Perhaps Gimbutas' work simply appeared at just the right cultural moment and should be seen as a phenomenon worthy of study in that context.

However, the work is presented here not as mythology but as archaeology and anthropology. Although it contains much of value, some of it stimulating and useful in the detail, it does not present a plausible case for a pre-Indo-European continent-wide goddess religion ousted by nomad warrior males. Common sense alone says that humanity is more complex than that simple model.

There may yet be truths within the myth but the superstructure does not justify the dreamy-eyed New Age posturings of Campbell in his introduction nor the socio-political assertions of modern day pagan 'jewish mommas' trying to escape daddy.

I do not usually like to quote Wikipedia at length, partly out of reliability concerns, but I think these criticisms should stand for the record about the corpus as a whole because the very idea of the 'great goddess' must and should be returned to its status of irrational belief or mere inadequately evidenced hypothesis.

" Anthropologist Bernard Wailes comments to the New York Times that he considers Gimbutas "immensely knowledgeable but not very good in critical analysis. [...] She amasses all the data and then leaps from it to conclusions without any intervening argument." He said that most archaeologists consider her to be an eccentric. This assessment was corroborated by female colleagues of Gimbutas.

" David Anthony has disputed Gimbutas's assertion that there was a widespread matriarchal society prior to the Kurgan incursion, noting that Europe had hillforts and weapons, and presumably warfare, long before the Kurgan.

" Two early critics of the "Goddess" theory were Andrew Fleming and Peter Ucko. Ucko, in his 1968 monograph Anthropomorphic figurines of predynastic Egypt warned against unwarranted inferences about the meanings of statues. Ucko, for example, notes that early Egyptian figurines of women holding their breasts had been taken as 'obviously' significant of maternity or fertility, but the Pyramid Texts revealed that in Egypt this was the female sign of grief. Fleming, in his 1969 paper "The Myth of the Mother Goddess", questioned the practice of identifying neolithic figures as female when they weren't clearly distinguished as male, and took issue with other aspects of the "Goddess" interpretation of Neolithic stone carvings and burial practices.

" The 2009 book Knossos and the prophets of modernism by Cathy Gere examines the political influence on archaeology more generally. Through the example of Knossos on the island of Crete, which had been (incorrectly) represented as the paradigm of a pacifist, matriarchal and sexually free society, Gere claims that archaeology can easily slip into reflecting what people want to see, rather than teaching people about an unfamiliar past."


By way of balance, however, like Marx, Gimbutas may have been ill-served by her followers and her publishers and admirers. She was undoubtedly an able academic and researcher and I recommend this article which places her in some kind of context where we can respect her contribution: http://www.suppressedhistories.net/articles/eller2.html

However, it is also true that it is very difficult to separate the actual work of the woman from her appropriation by others and even a cursory review of the literature shows that many radicals are in a state of willing her if not to be true in fact to be true in principle. That is fatal ...

Gimbutas' tragedy is that she became a pawn in a bigger cultural war between the two main genders within the Western middle classes over resources in the public sector and in the struggle for advantage within left-liberal coalition-builders who aimed at political power.

It is now probably time for a more balanced perspective. We can have respect for her as an academic in the field who contributed to our thinking about archaeological meaning even if wrong-headedly and a determination, as we should in dealing with other part-originators of politically and culturally useful ideologies, to critique the woolly-mindedness and weak evidence behind the myth that arose.

The book remains in the library but with a very big health warning marked 'ideological - take care of your critical faculties'.
show less
This is a reference-style book which proposes many cultural interpretations of the decorative aspects in pottery. The referenced pottery and archaeological digs were from various sites in Europe, the Near East and The British Isles.

I enjoyed the matriarchal myths the author reported and attributes to neo-pagan practices but in all honesty, there were next to no supporting documents or citations to validate her remarks. Such speculative ideas seem out of place here, when there are no data to justify the assertions. The over-arching hypothesis of a culture of The Goddess is unsubstantiated, perhaps more a case of 'away with the fairies' in support of the author's favoured notion. Gimbutas' earlier anthropological work was apparently very show more sound, so this departure was a surprise, even to her colleagues in archaeology (consult the Wikipedia entry for more perspectives).

Despite these drawbacks, I learned more about the symbolism on the inscribed pottery shards. These were validated with the cultural practices of those times. The data help understand hand-embroidery in textiles that appeared in more recent centuries which alludes to these ancient origins.
show less
½
A noted archaeologist demonstrates the existence of prehistoric goddess-worshipping, egalitarian, nonviolent cultures whose hidden heritage is just in the recent past being restored. NB: In her postulation of a pre-Kurgan invasion matrofocal, peaceful, goddess-worshipping European prehistory in neolithic times, the author has been widely discredited as being too speculative.
Beginning with a short Foreword by Joseph Campbell and an Introduction by the author, this book is illustrated on nearly every page by multiple photos and drawings of the artifacts being discussed. The author believes that the symbols craved or painted on cave walls, and tomb and temple walls, and pottery, as well as the forms of the pottery and sculptures are a language of the worship of the early European Goddess. She also shows how the worship of the various forms of the Goddess went underground, so to speak, with the arrival of the Indo-European gods, and traces its survival through the ages with traces still to be found in folk customs and legends of the present.

While the subject was interesting to me, this book would only be for show more those with a great curiosity in this area because of the overwhelming amount of material and the repetition as she attempts to convince the reader. I did eventually start skimming in places since the information in the captions was often exactly reproduced in the text. show less
As Joseph Campbell explains in the Foreword, this assembly of several thousand artifacts by Gimbutas from Neolithic village sites enables us to understand Neolithic Europe, is comparable to the "Rosetta Stone" in establishing a glossary of the hieroglyphs. With these keys, we are able to access the treasury of the past.
"The purpose of this book is to present the pictorial script for the religion of the Old European Great Goddess, consisting of signs, symbols, and images of divinities. Illustrated with nearly 2000 symbolic artefacts - sculptures, figurines, temple models, frescos, vases, sacrificial containers - the book forges a framework that supports the recovery of a long-suppressed portion of European heritage. Through the interpretation of images and symbols, the author reveals the basic worldview of these ancient European matriarchal cultures and decodes the symbolic language that has remained embedded in our civilization". -Dust jacket.
Source: Publisher

Members

Recently Added By

Author Information

Picture of author.
25+ Works 1,539 Members

All Editions

Campbell, Joseph (Foreword)

Awards and Honors

Common Knowledge

Original title
The Language of the Goddess
Original publication date
1989
Important places
Europe
Original language
English

Classifications

Genres
Anthropology, Nonfiction, Religion & Spirituality, History, Art & Design, General Nonfiction
DDC/MDS
291.042ReligionOther religions[Formerly: General Religious Topics]Essays
LCC
BL473.5 .G55Philosophy, Psychology and ReligionReligions. Mythology. RationalismReligions. Mythology. RationalismReligious doctrines (General)Other
BISAC

Statistics

Members
608
Popularity
47,774
Reviews
8
Rating
(3.88)
Languages
5 — English, French, German, Italian, Spanish
Media
Paper
ISBNs
11
ASINs
5