The Symbolism of the Exotiká

The Devil actively opposes “the good” in Christian cosmology, by tempting people to swerve from the path of virtue. Formally, Satan and his fellow fallen angels, the demons, controvert the aesthetic and moral values of society: they are dark, smelly, malign and monstrous. The exotiká in Greece, a b...

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Main Author: Charles Stewart
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Department of Anthropology, University of Chicago 2014-06-01
Series:Semiotic Review
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Online Access:https://semioticreview.com/sr/index.php/srindex/article/view/16
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author Charles Stewart
author_facet Charles Stewart
author_sort Charles Stewart
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description The Devil actively opposes “the good” in Christian cosmology, by tempting people to swerve from the path of virtue. Formally, Satan and his fellow fallen angels, the demons, controvert the aesthetic and moral values of society: they are dark, smelly, malign and monstrous. The exotiká in Greece, a broad category of at least thirty morally ambiguous creatures, are local extensions and variations of the Orthodox Christian idea of demons and the Devil. Local communities have developed detailed narratives of these demonic figures, which far exceed the information found in scripture. Based on field research in the mountain village of Apeíranthos on the Cycladic island of Naxos, and supplemented by comparative accounts from throughout the Greek-speaking world, I study the symbolism of the exotiká in order to produce a grammar and lexicon of moral opposition. This analysis allows a new perspective on Greek values, and the struggle to realize them in practice, by following a via negativa and considering in detail the semiotics of ambiguity and evil. [NB: This article originally appeared as a chapter in Demons and the Devil: Moral Imagination in Modern Greek Culture (Princeton, 1991) and is here reprinted with permission of the Princeton University Press.]
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spelling doaj-art-23b7c036eb9b40a0b43e9cbfaacadfc02025-07-29T17:16:41ZengDepartment of Anthropology, University of ChicagoSemiotic Review3066-81072014-06-01210.71743/f99eah46The Symbolism of the ExotikáCharles Stewart The Devil actively opposes “the good” in Christian cosmology, by tempting people to swerve from the path of virtue. Formally, Satan and his fellow fallen angels, the demons, controvert the aesthetic and moral values of society: they are dark, smelly, malign and monstrous. The exotiká in Greece, a broad category of at least thirty morally ambiguous creatures, are local extensions and variations of the Orthodox Christian idea of demons and the Devil. Local communities have developed detailed narratives of these demonic figures, which far exceed the information found in scripture. Based on field research in the mountain village of Apeíranthos on the Cycladic island of Naxos, and supplemented by comparative accounts from throughout the Greek-speaking world, I study the symbolism of the exotiká in order to produce a grammar and lexicon of moral opposition. This analysis allows a new perspective on Greek values, and the struggle to realize them in practice, by following a via negativa and considering in detail the semiotics of ambiguity and evil. [NB: This article originally appeared as a chapter in Demons and the Devil: Moral Imagination in Modern Greek Culture (Princeton, 1991) and is here reprinted with permission of the Princeton University Press.] https://semioticreview.com/sr/index.php/srindex/article/view/16GreeceexotikáNaxosvia negativasemioticsambiguity
spellingShingle Charles Stewart
The Symbolism of the Exotiká
Semiotic Review
Greece
exotiká
Naxos
via negativa
semiotics
ambiguity
title The Symbolism of the Exotiká
title_full The Symbolism of the Exotiká
title_fullStr The Symbolism of the Exotiká
title_full_unstemmed The Symbolism of the Exotiká
title_short The Symbolism of the Exotiká
title_sort symbolism of the exotika
topic Greece
exotiká
Naxos
via negativa
semiotics
ambiguity
url https://semioticreview.com/sr/index.php/srindex/article/view/16
work_keys_str_mv AT charlesstewart thesymbolismoftheexotika
AT charlesstewart symbolismoftheexotika