Bibliographies |
Ellwood,
Robert S. and McGraw, Barbara A. 2002. Many
Peoples, Many Faiths. Upper
Saddle River, New Jersey: Prentice Hall. Fasching, Darrell J. and deChant, Dell. 2001. Comparative Religious Ethics. Malden, Massachusetts: Blackwell Publishers Inc. Dell deChant informed me during the fall 2002 semester at the University of South Florida, in his introduction to World Religions Class REL 2300-001, about the religious beliefs of archaic and primal religions, along with the empirical religions of the time period discussed in his lecture. Houston, Stephen. 1996. Of gods, glyphs and kings: divinity and rulership among the classic maya. Antiquity. Volume 70. Number 268. PP. 289-312. Ripinsky-Naxon, Michael. 1993. Maya Cosmovision and Shamanistic Symbolism. Journal of Prehistoric Religion. Volume 7. PP. 49-61. Mcgee, R. Jon. 1996. Lacandon maya oral performance and the inscriptions of Palenque. Eighth Palenque Round Table. Number 10. PP. 129-134. Schlak, Arthur. 1996. Venus, Mercury, and the Sun: GI, GII. and GIII of the Palenque Triad. Res -- Cambridge, Mass. Volume 29-30. PP. 180-202. Spalinger, Anthony. 1998. The limitations of formal Ancient Egyptian Religion. Journal of Near Eastern Studies. Volume 57. Number 4. PP. 241-260. Nash, June. 1997. Gendered deities and the survival of culture. History of Religions. Volume 36. Number 4. PP. 333-356. "Maya Civilization," Microsoft® Encarta® Online Encyclopedia 2003 http://encarta.msn.com © 1997-2003 Microsoft Corporation. All Rights Reserved Hooker, Richard. 1996. The Mayas. Civilizations in America. http://www.wsu.edu:8080/~dee/civamrca/mayas.htm "Egyptian Mythology," Microsoft® Encarta® Online Encyclopedia 2003 http://encarta.msn.com © 1997-2003 Microsoft Corporation. All Rights Reserved. |