Ancient writing is conventionally approached as a counterpart of speech, as in the dyad orality/literacy. Alphabetical writing systems are often regarded as superior precisely because they are better able to record speech. This paper takes inspiration from the work on ancient Near Eastern writing systems and considers ancient literacy as a general competence in handling sign systems that are often as much about numbers and quantities as about phonetic transcription. Means of recording proper names assume a special importance in transactions between strangers, and in documents that circulate without much context. But judged in terms of a capacity to handle numbers, signs, diagrams, and other symbols the debate over ancient literacy, and illi...
Although distinctive and groundbreaking in many respects, Samuel Johnson's Dictionary of the English...
From its first occurrence around 3000 B.C., writing was integral to the self-definition of Egyptian ...
Recent studies in the fields of orality and oral performance reveal that the recognition of oral fea...
This study contributes to the understanding of communication in antiquity by analysing a few specifi...
To echo O'Brien O'Keeffes words, "committing the work to writing involves loss and gain." The loss I...
Previous discussions of the origins of writing in the Ancient Near East have not incorporated the ne...
This article considers a theoretical problem at the center of historical research on literacy, the s...
It is hard to answer the question when the human race started speaking: was it 50,000, 150,000 or 25...
This volume, entitled Signs – Sounds – Semantics and offered as part of the “Wiener Offene Oriental...
Up until about 700 years before Christ the Greek peoples were non-literate. About that time they inv...
A wide range of document types have been preserved written in the undeciphered scripts of the Aegean...
Cultures and worldviews are inscribed by means of ‘writing’, or what Derrida calls ‘the perdurable i...
I would like, however, to demonstrate in this essay--by looking specifically at the English allitera...
By now we might hope for some kind of consensus on the genesis of the Homeric poems, but the plot se...
The aim of this paper is to explore the dynamics of writing in ancient society, with a special focus...
Although distinctive and groundbreaking in many respects, Samuel Johnson's Dictionary of the English...
From its first occurrence around 3000 B.C., writing was integral to the self-definition of Egyptian ...
Recent studies in the fields of orality and oral performance reveal that the recognition of oral fea...
This study contributes to the understanding of communication in antiquity by analysing a few specifi...
To echo O'Brien O'Keeffes words, "committing the work to writing involves loss and gain." The loss I...
Previous discussions of the origins of writing in the Ancient Near East have not incorporated the ne...
This article considers a theoretical problem at the center of historical research on literacy, the s...
It is hard to answer the question when the human race started speaking: was it 50,000, 150,000 or 25...
This volume, entitled Signs – Sounds – Semantics and offered as part of the “Wiener Offene Oriental...
Up until about 700 years before Christ the Greek peoples were non-literate. About that time they inv...
A wide range of document types have been preserved written in the undeciphered scripts of the Aegean...
Cultures and worldviews are inscribed by means of ‘writing’, or what Derrida calls ‘the perdurable i...
I would like, however, to demonstrate in this essay--by looking specifically at the English allitera...
By now we might hope for some kind of consensus on the genesis of the Homeric poems, but the plot se...
The aim of this paper is to explore the dynamics of writing in ancient society, with a special focus...
Although distinctive and groundbreaking in many respects, Samuel Johnson's Dictionary of the English...
From its first occurrence around 3000 B.C., writing was integral to the self-definition of Egyptian ...
Recent studies in the fields of orality and oral performance reveal that the recognition of oral fea...