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Historical Consciousness and the Use of the Past in the Ancient
World offers linked essays on uses of the past in prominent and
diverse cultures in ancient civilizations across the world. The
contributors are leading experts in Ancient Near Eastern Studies,
Sinology, Biblical Studies, Classics, and Maya Studies. This volume
addresses crucial questions in current scholarship on historical
consciousness and historiography. These questions include the
formation of different traditions and the manifold uses of the past
in particular socio-political contexts or circumstances; the ways
in which these traditions and these types of cultural memory
informed or contributed to the rise of more formal modes of
historiography; interactions between formal modes of historiography
and other traditions of historical consciousness during their
transmission; and the implications of such interactions for
cultural heritage, collective memory, and later understandings of
history. The chapters discuss many questions relating to the
volume's theme: theoretical and methodological approaches to
ancient material; intellectual, didactic, and social circumstances
and institutions; ideological motivations behind, and social
functions of, interactions; conceptual, narratological, and
literary processes and mechanisms such as synchronism, sequencing
of events, periodization, mythological prologues, aetiological
motifs, genealogical and chronological schemes, geographical and
ethnographical features, temporal and stylistic devices;
interchanges between different temporal frameworks such as
mythical, legendary, ritual, chronological; the extent and variety
of interactions such as manifestations in visual arts, monuments,
cultic activities, music and dramatic performance; physical or
textual channels for dissemination and transmission; stages and
periods of interaction in different cultures, authors, and texts;
convention and innovation; differences and relationships between
scholarly and popular conceptions of history; and exchanges between
local traditions and ones with a global perspective. By taking an
interdisciplinary approach, this volume situates the rise of formal
modes of historiography within a larger context of the development
of historical consciousness and a wider web of intercommunicating
discourses. It also uncovers intellectual processes, literary
mechanisms, and social institutions involved in the construction of
history. During its construction, while many local traditions
persisted, some ancients gradually went beyond the temporal and
spatial limitations of their local traditions, arriving at a more
extended and unified timespan, a wider geographical region, and a
common origin.
Performances in the premodern communities shaped identities,
created meanings, generated and maintained political control. But
unlike other social scientists, archaeologists have not worked much
with these concepts. Archaeology of Performance shows how the
notions of theatricality and spectacle are as important economics
and politics in understanding how ancient communities work. Without
sacrificing conceptual rigor, the contributors draw on the
wide-ranging literature on performance. Without sacrificing
material evidence, they try to see how performance creates meaning
and ideology. Drawing on evidence from societies large and small,
Archaeology of Performance offers an important new ways of
understanding ancient theaters of power.
Performances in the premodern communities shaped identities,
created meanings, generated and maintained political control. But
unlike other social scientists, archaeologists have not worked much
with these concepts. Archaeology of Performance shows how the
notions of theatricality and spectacle are as important economics
and politics in understanding how ancient communities work. Without
sacrificing conceptual rigor, the contributors draw on the
wide-ranging literature on performance. Without sacrificing
material evidence, they try to see how performance creates meaning
and ideology. Drawing on evidence from societies large and small,
Archaeology of Performance offers an important new ways of
understanding ancient theaters of power.
This novel work uses case studies of both familiar and unfamiliar
materials, expanding consideration of ancient Egyptian elite
culture to encompass lived experience and exploitation of the
natural environment. The opening chapter sets out the conceptual
ground for the analyses that follow, arguing that the relatively
ephemeral activities under investigation were centrally important
to the actors. The first and largest study treats human
organization of the landscape and its use to create and transmit
elite meanings, especially through pictorial and encyclopaedic
forms, and to mobilize emotional values. Next, a treatment of the
planning of third millennium settlements on the floodplain argues
that Egypt offers a partly rural perspective that provides an
alternative to the urban focus of many early civilizations but has
parallels in elite culture in much of the world. The third study
discusses how a single year's events were orchestrated to culminate
in a celebratory hunt in which the king, his court, and high
officials participated. The concluding chapter presents an initial
synthesis of Egyptian treatments of elite experience, drawing upon
additional evidence in particular from literary texts and attitudes
to travel. Throughout the book, aesthetics and the cultivation of
pleasure and delight are emphasized as essential to ancient elite
life.
Osiris, Horus, Isis, Thoth, Anubis - the many strange and
compelling figures of the Egyptian gods and goddesses seem to
possess endless fascination. The renowned Egyptologist Erik Hornung
here studies the ancient Egyptians' conceptions of god, basing his
account on a thorough reappraisal of the primary sources. His book,
now available in English for the first time, is the most extensive
exploration yet undertaken of the nature of Egyptian
religion.Hornung examines the characteristics, spheres of action,
and significance of Egyptian gods and goddesses, analyzing the
complex and changing iconography used to represent them, and
disentangling the many seemingly contradictory aspects of the
religion of which they are a part. He seeks to answer two basic
questions: How did the Egyptians themselves see their gods? Did
they believe there was an impersonal, anonymous force behind the
multiplicity of their deities? Throughout, he attempts to evoke the
complexity and richness of the religion of the ancient Egyptians
and of their worldview, which differs so greatly from our own.A
work of extraordinary distinction, Hornung s book will appeal to
anyone interested in ancient Egypt, in ancient religion, and in the
history of religion, as well as students and scholars of ancient
history, anthropology, and archaeology. Sensitively translated by
John Baines and with a new preface by the author, this edition has
been amplified and updated with an English-language audience in
mind."
A generously illustrated selection of John Baines's influential
writings on two core areas of ancient Egyptian civilization: the
role of writing, which was very different in antiquity from what is
familiar in the modern world, and the importance of visual culture.
These questions are explored through a number of case studies. The
volume assembles articles that were scattered in publications in a
variety of disciplines, making available key contributions on core
problems of theory, comparison, and analysis in the study of many
civilizations and offering important points of departure for
further research. Three wholly new essays are included, and the
overall approach is an interdisciplinary one, synthesizing insights
from archaeology, anthropology, and art history as well as
Egyptology.
Historical Consciousness and the Use of the Past in the Ancient
World offers linked essays on uses of the past in prominent and
diverse cultures in ancient civilizations across the world. The
contributors are leading experts in Ancient Near Eastern Studies,
Sinology, Biblical Studies, Classics, and Maya Studies. This volume
addresses crucial questions in current scholarship on historical
consciousness and historiography. These questions include the
formation of different traditions and the manifold uses of the past
in particular socio-political contexts or circumstances; the ways
in which these traditions and these types of cultural memory
informed or contributed to the rise of more formal modes of
historiography; interactions between formal modes of historiography
and other traditions of historical consciousness during their
transmission; and the implications of such interactions for
cultural heritage, collective memory, and later understandings of
history. By taking an interdisciplinary approach, this volume
situates the rise of formal modes of historiography within a larger
context of developments in historical consciousness and a wider web
of intercommunicating discourses. It also uncovers intellectual
processes, literary mechanisms, and social institutions involved in
the construction of history. During the construction of ancient
historiographies, while many local traditions persisted, some
ancients gradually went beyond the temporal and spatial limitations
of their local traditions, arriving at a more extended and unified
timespan, a wider geographical region, and a common origin.
A generously illustrated selection of John Baines's influential
writings on two core areas of ancient Egyptian civilization: the
role of writing, which was very different in antiquity from what is
familiar in the modern world, and the importance of visual culture.
These questions are explored through a number of case studies. The
volume assembles articles that were scattered in publications in a
variety of disciplines, making available key contributions on core
problems of theory, comparison, and analysis in the study of many
civilizations and offering important points of departure for
further research. Three wholly new essays are included, and the
overall approach is an interdisciplinary one, synthesizing insights
from archaeology, anthropology, and art history as well as
Egyptology.
This volume gathers papers from the first conference ever to be
held on the disappearance of writing systems, in Oxford in March
2004. While the invention and decipherment of writing systems have
long been focuses of research, their eclipse or replacement have
been little studied. Because writing is so important in many
cultures and civilizations, its disappearance - followed by a
period without it or by replacement by a different writing system -
is of almost equal significance to invention as a mark of radical
change. Probably more writing systems have disappeared than
survived in the last five thousand years. Case studies from the Old
and New Worlds are presented, ranging over periods from the first
millennium BC to the present. In order to address many types of
transmission, the broadest possible definition of 'writing' is
used, notably including Mexican pictography and the Andean khipu
system. One chapter discusses the larger proportion of known human
societies which have not possessed complex material codes like
writing, offering an alternative perspective on the long-term
transmission of socially salient subjects. There is a concluding
essay that draws out common themes and offers an initial synthesis
of results. The volume offers a new perspective on approaches to
writing that will be significant for the understanding of writing
systems and their social functions, literacy, memory, and
high-cultural communication systems in general.
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Tobacco Leaves
John Bain
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R528
Discovery Miles 5 280
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This volume gathers papers from the first conference ever to be
held on the disappearance of writing systems, in Oxford in March
2004. While the invention and decipherment of writing systems have
long been focuses of research, their eclipse or replacement have
been little studied. Because writing is so important in many
cultures and civilizations, its disappearance - followed by a
period without it or by replacement by a different writing system -
is of almost equal significance to invention as a mark of radical
change. Probably more writing systems have disappeared than
survived in the last five thousand years. Case studies from the Old
and New Worlds are presented, ranging over periods from the first
millennium BC to the present. In order to address many types of
transmission, the broadest possible definition of 'writing' is
used, notably including Mexican pictography and the Andean khipu
system.One chapter discusses the larger proportion of known human
societies which have not possessed complex material codes like
writing, offering an alternative perspective on the long-term
transmission of socially salient subjects. A concluding essay draws
out common themes and offers an initial synthesis of results. This
volume offers a new perspective on approaches to writing that will
be significant for the understanding of writing systems and their
social functions, literacy, memory, and high-cultural communication
systems in general.
This Is A New Release Of The Original 1896 Edition.
This is a reproduction of a book published before 1923. This book
may have occasional imperfections such as missing or blurred pages,
poor pictures, errant marks, etc. that were either part of the
original artifact, or were introduced by the scanning process. We
believe this work is culturally important, and despite the
imperfections, have elected to bring it back into print as part of
our continuing commitment to the preservation of printed works
worldwide. We appreciate your understanding of the imperfections in
the preservation process, and hope you enjoy this valuable book.
++++ The below data was compiled from various identification fields
in the bibliographic record of this title. This data is provided as
an additional tool in helping to ensure edition identification:
++++ Tobacco In Song And Story John Bain John Bain A. Gray &
co., 1896 Tobacco
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