Writing Around the Ancient Mediterranean: Practices and Adaptations
★★★★★
★★★★★
English
Writing in the ancient Mediterranean existed against a backdrop of very high levels of interaction and contact. In the societies around its shores, writing was a dynamic practice that could serve many purposes from a tool used by elites to control resources and establish their power bases to a symbol of local identity and a means of conveying complex information and ideas. This volume brings together contributions by members of the Contexts of and Relations between Early Writing Systems (CREWS) research team and visiting fellows, offering a range of different perspectives and approaches to problems of writing in the ancient Mediterranean. Their focus is on practices, viewing writing as something that people do within a wider social and cultural context, and on adaptations, considering the ways in which writing changed and was changed by the people using it.
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Product Details
Dimensions: 170 x 240mm
Publication Date: 15 Aug 2022
Publisher: Oxbow Books
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781789258509
About
Philippa M. Steele is the Director of the CREWS Project a Senior Research Associate at the Faculty of Classics University of Cambridge and a Senior Research Fellow of Magdalene College. She has previously been awarded a British Academy Postdoctoral Fellowship and the Evans Pritchard Lectureship at All Souls College Oxford followed by a European Research Council grant to run the CREWS Project and has published widely on ancient languages and writing systems with a particular focus on Cyprus and the Aegean. Philip Boyes is a research associate at the Faculty of Classics University of Cambridge. As part of the CREWS Project he works on the social context of writing at Late Bronze Age Ugarit. He has previously worked on the archaeology of the East Mediterranean and Levant in the Late Bronze and Early Iron Ages.