Literacy and orality in ancient Greece / Rosalind Thomas
Material type:
- 0521373468
- 9780521373463
- 0521377420
- 9780521377423
- 0521377468
- 9780521377461
- 0521377463
- Greek language -- Social aspects -- Greece
- Greek language -- Written Greek -- Greece
- Oral tradition -- Greece
- Oral communication -- Greece
- Literacy -- Greece
- Writing -- Greece
- Language and culture -- Greece
- Written communication -- Greece -- History
- Oral tradition -- Greece -- History
- Literacy -- Greece -- History
- Writing -- Greece -- History
- Greece -- Civilization
- ARCH YNDC 302.2 T454LÂ 20
- PA227Â .T46 1992
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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SAIACS Archives Room | Yandell Collection | ARCH YNDC 302.2 T454L (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Not for loan | 064707 |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 176-197) and index
Introduction -- Literacy and orality -- Oral poetry -- The coming of the alphabet: literacy and oral communication in archaic Greece -- Beyond the rationalist view of writing : between 'literate' and 'oral' -- Orality, performance, and memorial -- Literacy and the state : the profusion of writing -- Epilogue: the Roman world
This book explores the role of written and oral communication in Greece, and is the first systematic and sustained treatment at this level. The subject of literacy is very hard to think about objectively, and extensive oral communication is commonly regarded merely as a feature of the primitive. Ancient Greece challenges many of our assumptions about both and is receiving increased attention from scholars. Rosalind Thomas examines the recent theoretical debates about literacy and orality and explores the uses of writing and oral communication, and their interaction, in ancient Greece. She is concerned to set the significance of written and oral communication as much as possible in their social and historical context, and to stress the specifically Greek characteristics in their use, arguing that the functions of literacy and orality are often fluid and culturally determined. Her book draws together the results of recent studies and suggests further avenues of enquiry. Individual chapters deal with (among other things) the role of writing in archaic Greece, oral poetry, the visual and monumental impact of writing, the performance and oral transmission even of written texts, and the use of writing by the city-states; there is an epilogue on Rome. All ancient evidence is translated and there are illustrations. Students of ancient history and classics, and anyone interested in literacy and orality, will find this book of importance to them
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English
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