Ancient Greece has for too long been studied in isolation from
its Near Eastern neighbors. And the ancient Near East itself has
for too long been seen as an undifferentiated cultural monolith.
Classics and Near Eastern Studies, in our modern universities,
continue to be separated by various disciplinary, linguistic, and
ideological walls. Yet there is a growing trend to dismantle these
divides and look at the Greek world within its fullest geographical
and cultural contexts.
This book aims to bring the comparative study of Greek and Near
Eastern cosmogonies to a new level. It analyzes themes such as
succession myths, expressions of poetic inspiration, and claims to
cosmic knowledge, as well as the role of itinerant specialists in
the transmission of theogonies. Rather than compiling literary
parallels from different periods and languages and treating the
Near East as a monolithic matrix, the author focuses on the motifs
specific to the North-West Semitic tradition with which the Greeks
had direct contact in the Archaic period. Focusing on Hesiod's
Theogony, the Orphic texts, and their Ugaritic, Phoenician, and
Hebrew counterparts, Carolina Lopez-Ruiz avoids traditional
diffusionist assumptions and proposes instead that dynamic cultural
interaction led to the oral and intimate transmission of stories
and beliefs.
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