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Imagining the Past - Historical Fiction in New Kingdom Egypt (Hardcover, New)
Loot Price: R2,603
Discovery Miles 26 030
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Imagining the Past - Historical Fiction in New Kingdom Egypt (Hardcover, New)
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Donate to Against Period Poverty
Total price: R2,613
Discovery Miles: 26 130
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Five hundred years before Homer immortalized the Trojan Horse, the
ancient Egyptians had already composed a tale of soldiers hiding
Ali Baba-like in baskets to capture a besieged city. Shortly after
the rise to power of the warrior pharaoh Ramesses II ("the Great"),
Egyptian authors began to write stories about battles and conquest.
However, these stories were not set in the present, but in the
past-they were the world's first works of historical fiction. These
literary recreations of past events, which preserve fascinating
mixtures of fact and fiction, provide unparalleled information
about topics as diverse as ancient Egyptian historiography,
religion, and notions of humor and wit. Imagining the Past is the
first volume to provide complete translations and commentary for
the historical fiction composed during Egypt's New Kingdom. The
four tales included here represent a multifaceted approach to
history and its actors. The Quarrel of Apepi and Seqenenere, set at
the end of the Second Intermediate Period, preserves details of
political history and taxation that are attested in contemporaneous
sources. In The Capture of Joppa, a historically-attested general
Djehuty from the reign of Thutmose III successfully defeats the
ruler of Joppa through one of the first attested stratagems in
world military history. Royalty takes center stage with Thutmose
III in Asia, whose fragmentary narrative may be a fictional
presentation of the Battle of Megiddo. The Libyan Battle Story,
composed only a generation after the Battle of Perire, contains
abundant historical details attested in hieroglyphic and hieratic
sources and borders on fictionalized history. A concluding analysis
summarizes the audience and function of historical fiction as well
as theology and historiography within the tales. An appendix of the
hieroglyphic texts, all transliterated with philological
commentary, make these texts accessible to a wide audience, while
representing the first critical scholarly edition of them
available. Colleen Manassa's thorough research into the literary,
political, and social context of each tale will further stimulate
current discussions of genres and the transmission of texts in
Egyptolology and comparative literature studies.
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