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Overview"Seth L. Sanders offers a history of first-millennium scribes through their heavenly journeys and heroes, treating the visions of ancient Mesopotamian and Judean literature as pragmatic things made by people. He presents each scribal culture as an individual institution via detailed evidence for how visionary figures were used over time. The author also provides the first comprehensive survey of direct evidence for contact between Babylonian, Hebrew, and Aramaic scribal cultures, when and how they came to share key features. Rather than irrecoverable religious experience, he shows how ideal scribal ""selves"" were made available through rituals documented in texts and institutions that made these roles durable. He examines how these texts and selves worked together to create religious literature as the world came to be known differently: a historical ontology of first-millennium scribal cultures. The result is as much a history of science as a history of mysticism, providing insight into how knowledge of the universe was created in ancient times." Full Product DetailsAuthor: Seth L. SandersPublisher: Mohr Siebeck Imprint: Mohr Siebeck Volume: 167 Dimensions: Width: 24.20cm , Height: 2.30cm , Length: 16.00cm Weight: 0.583kg ISBN: 9783161544569ISBN 10: 3161544560 Pages: 294 Publication Date: 07 June 2017 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviews.. .This is an important book, both in content and methodology, that will serve as a foundation for future studies on the contracts between ancient Mesopotamian literature and the literature of the Second Temple period. --Uri Gabbay, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, H-Net Online .. .An extraordinary example of a multidisciplinary endeavor, combining the fields of Sumerology, Assyriology, biblical studies, Qumran studies, apocalyptic literature, and religious studies. [...] This is an important book, both in content and methodology, that will serve as a foundation for future studies on the contracts between ancient Mesopotamian literature and the literature of the Second Temple period. --Uri Gabbay, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, H-Net Online Author InformationBorn 1968; 1999 PhD from Johns Hopkins University; 2007-13 Assistant Professor of Religion, 2013-15 Associate Professor at Trinity College; since 2015 Professor of Religious Studies at University of California Davis; 2010-11 Fellow at NYU Institute for the Study of the Ancient World; 2015-16 NEH and Guggenheim Fellow. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |