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As a fact, anthropophagy is certainly a decadent thing, not a primitive one.
It is hard not to suspect a lot of anthropophagy in the closet of the human past.
They practice anthropophagy, by eating people, or even digging out corpses from graves to eat them.
That's like taking a cannibal away from his tribe and executing him for anthropophagy.
He invented the idea of cultural anthropophagy, cannibalism.
Turner isn't an authority on the subject of anthropophagy (the clinical term for cannibalism), but he may not be far off.
It is also called anthropophagy.
In the years following the band released Anthropophagy (1987) and Who Are the True (1988).
He is also notable for proposing "Anthropophagy" at a public meeting and offering himself as food to starving Algerians.
But geneticists have now discovered a genetic signature in many ethnic groups that suggests anthropophagy has been a fixture in human history.
According to Read, some equated the act of anthropophagy to the ritual of Holy Communion.
A system of cross-references was used for this purpose, for example anthropophagy: see eucharist, altar, communion.
Anthropophagy (TBA)
In 1868, during an Algerian Famine, when his cries for hippophagy were not reciprocated he asked for anthropophagy.
References to anthropophagy are also found in Taittiriya 7.2.10 and Katha Samhita 34.11.
Both Ms. Menezes and Ms. Ramalho continue Brazilian pop's tradition of anthropophagy, or cannibalism, of swallowing and transforming every style that comes their way.
In the fourth chapter, entitled "The Prehistoric World of Anthropophagy", Arens deals with archaeological arguments for socially approved cannibalism in European and North American prehistory.
The Man-Eating Myth: Anthropology and Anthropophagy is an influential anthropological study of socially sanctioned cultural cannibalism across the world, which casts a critical perspective on the existence of such practices.
In chapter one, "The Nature of Anthropology and Anthropophagy", Arens discusses the study of anthropophagy, or cannibalism, within the anthropological discipline.
Proclaiming that "there is now overwhelming biological, anthropological and archaeological evidence that cannibalism was once all around us", he attacked Arens for his blanket and "bizarre" accusations against the concept of cultural anthropophagy.
It may be an ark, but one on which anthropophagy is rife; an ark skippered by some crazy greybeard who beats you round the head with his gopher-wood stave, and might pitch you overboard at any moment.
Her horror fiction story "The White Maniac: A Doctor's Tale" (included in James Doig's anthology Australian Ghost Stories (2010)) verges on being a tale of vampirism, but its theme is in fact anthropophagy.
In a 1979 book, "The Man-Eating Myth: Anthropology and Anthropophagy," William Arens of the State University of New York at Stony Brook dismissed as circumstantial and unconvincing all reports of ritual cannibalism.
Your Astute Majesty can hardly have failed to notice that the earlier pages have treated-casually, without remorse or repentance-of such sins as homicide, prolicide, suicide, anthropophagy, incest, harlotry, torture, idolatry, and breach of the Commandment to honor father and mother.