Lillian Young: In Class Reading: Ancient Art and Ritual Chapter 3

 In Chapter 3: Seasonal Rites: The Spring Festival, primitive man re-enacts activities that interest and emotionally engage him, such as hunting, fighting, and later, farming. These activities become rituals performed by the entire tribe or community, rather than individual emotions. Rituals are fixed and performed at regular intervals. Food and children are the primary concerns of primitive man, and the regulation of seasons through magical rites aims to ensure an adequate food supply. Seasonal festivals, recurring regularly, solidify and abstract the emotions associated with them. Primitive man's interest in the seasons is driven by their relationship to his food supply, rather than aesthetics. The dates of religious festivals vary depending on the climate and surroundings. 

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