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Scribal Repertoires in Egypt from the New Kingdom to the Early Islamic Period (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R4,643
Discovery Miles 46 430
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Scribal Repertoires in Egypt from the New Kingdom to the Early Islamic Period (Hardcover)
Series: Oxford Studies in Ancient Documents
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Scribal Repertoires in Egypt from the New Kingdom to the Early
Islamic Period deals with the possibility of glimpsing pre-modern
and early modern Egyptian scribes, the actual people who produced
ancient documents, through the ways in which they organized and
wrote those documents. While traditional research has focused on
identifying a 'pure' or 'original' text behind the actual
manuscripts that have come down to us from pre-modern Egypt, the
volume looks instead at variation - different ways of saying the
same thing - as a rich source for understanding the complex social
and cultural environments in which scribes lived and worked,
breaking with the traditional conception of variation in scribal
texts as 'free' or indicative of 'corruption'. As such, it presents
a novel reconceptualization of scribal variation in pre-modern
Egypt from the point of view of contemporary historical
sociolinguistics, seeing scribes as agents embedded in particular
geographical, temporal, and socio-cultural environments.
Introducing to Egyptology concepts such as scribal communities,
networks, and repertoires, among others, the authors then apply
them to a variety of phenomena, including features of lexicon,
grammar, orthography, palaeography, layout, and format. After first
presenting this conceptual framework, they demonstrate how it has
been applied to better-studied pre-modern societies by drawing upon
the well-established domain of scribal variation in pre-modern
English, before proceeding to a series of case studies applying
these concepts to scribal variation spanning thousands of years,
from the languages and writing systems of Pharaonic times, to those
of Late Antique and Islamic Egypt.
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