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Overview"When we encounter a text, whether ancient or modern, we typically start at the beginning and work our way toward the end. In Tracking the Master Scribe, Sara J. Milstein demonstrates that for biblical and Mesopotamian literature, this habit can lead to misinterpretation.In the ancient Near East, ""master scribes""--those who had the authority to produce and revise literature--regularly modified their texts in the course of transmission. One of the most effective techniques for change was to add something new to the front, what Milstein calls ""revision through introduction."" This method allowed scribes to preserve their received material while simultaneously recasting it. As a result, many biblical and Mesopotamian texts continue to be interpreted solely through the lens of their final contributions. First impressions carry weight. Tracking the Master Scribe demonstrates what is to be gained when we engage questions of literary history in the context of how scribes actually worked. Drawing upon the two earliest corpora that allow us to track large-scale change, the book provides substantial hard evidence of revision through introduction, as well as a set of detailed case studies that offer fresh insight into well-known biblical and Mesopotamian texts. The result is the first comprehensive profile of this key scribal method: one that was ubiquitous in the ancient Near East and epitomizes the attitudes of the master scribes toward the literature that they left behind." Full Product DetailsAuthor: Sara J. Milstein (Assistant Professor of Hebrew Bible and Ancient Near Eastern Studies, Assistant Professor of Hebrew Bible and Ancient Near Eastern Studies, The University of British Columbia)Publisher: Oxford University Press Inc Imprint: Oxford University Press Inc Dimensions: Width: 23.60cm , Height: 2.80cm , Length: 15.50cm Weight: 0.454kg ISBN: 9780190205393ISBN 10: 0190205393 Pages: 264 Publication Date: 27 October 2016 Audience: College/higher education , Undergraduate , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsReviews<em>Tracking the Master Scribe</em> powerfully represents a new frontier in the study of the formation of biblical and other Near Eastern texts. Drawing on impressive expertise in Assyriology and Biblical Studies, Milstein uses documented cases of textual growth to explore a specific way that scribes revised ancient texts: through adding new material at the beginnings of texts. This kind of specific, inter-disciplinary focus on a type of textual growth, along with Milstein's restrained and thoughtful application of her results to analysis of biblical texts, is an example for subsequent studies to learn from and follow. --David Carr Sara Milstein takes her readers on a fascinating journey along traditions in motion. She demonstrates how ancient scribes have 'reduced, reused, and recycled' traditional narratives such as Adapa, Gilgamesh, Judges, and Samuel by fronting them with a new backstory. Just as the ancient scribes have given the old stories new readings and meanings by way of a revision through introduction, Milstein herself gives her reader a new lens through which the modern reader can rediscover the well-known narratives. A must-read for anyone interested in ancient scribal culture and narrative traditions. --Martti Nissinen, Professor of Old Testament Studies, University of Helsinki Sara Milstein probes the prefaces secondarily added to texts in the Hebrew Bible and in Mesopotamian literature. Her inquiry questions conventional wisdom about text production in the past. It opens up new ways to understand the scribal part in the transformation and reframing of tradition. Original, important, compelling. --Karel van der Toorn, author of <em>Scribal Culture and the Making of the Hebrew Bible</em> Adapa and Gilgamesh-two Mesopotamian heroes; Gideon and Abimelekh, Samuel and Saul-four stalwarts in biblical tales. . . these figures are not normally treated together; but under Sara Milstein's finely tuned and critically imaginative mind they are, because their tales had been outfitted with transformative beginnings. Her effort provides a stimulating perspective on how to think about ancient lore. Highly recommended to lovers of literature, ancient and beyond. --Jack M. Sasson, Werthan Professor of Judaic and Biblical Literature (emeritus), Vanderbilt University <em>Tracking the Master Scribe</em> powerfully represents a new frontier in the study of the formation of biblical and other Near Eastern texts. Drawing on impressive expertise in Assyriology and Biblical Studies, Milstein uses documented cases of textual growth to explore a specific way that scribes revised ancient texts: through adding new material at the beginnings of texts. This kind of specific, inter-disciplinary focus on a type of textual growth, along with Milstein's restrained and thoughtful application of her results to analysis of biblical texts, is an example for subsequent studies to learn from and follow. --David Carr, Professor of Old Testament/Hebrew Bible, Union Theological Seminary Sara Milstein takes her readers on a fascinating journey along traditions in motion. She demonstrates how ancient scribes have 'reduced, reused, and recycled' traditional narratives such as Adapa, Gilgamesh, Judges, and Samuel by fronting them with a new backstory. Just as the ancient scribes have given the old stories new readings and meanings by way of a revision through introduction, Milstein herself gives her reader a new lens through which the modern reader can rediscover the well-known narratives. A must-read for anyone interested in ancient scribal culture and narrative traditions. --Martti Nissinen, Professor of Old Testament Studies, University of Helsinki Sara Milstein probes the prefaces secondarily added to texts in the Hebrew Bible and in Mesopotamian literature. Her inquiry questions conventional wisdom about text production in the past. It opens up new ways to understand the scribal part in the transformation and reframing of tradition. Original, important, compelling. --Karel van der Toorn, author of <em>Scribal Culture and the Making of the Hebrew Bible</em> Adapa and Gilgamesh-two Mesopotamian heroes; Gideon and Abimelekh, Samuel and Saul-four stalwarts in biblical tales. . . these figures are not normally treated together; but under Sara Milstein's finely tuned and critically imaginative mind they are, because their tales had been outfitted with transformative beginnings. Her effort provides a stimulating perspective on how to think about ancient lore. Highly recommended to lovers of literature, ancient and beyond. --Jack M. Sasson, Werthan Professor of Judaic and Biblical Literature (emeritus), Vanderbilt University Author InformationSara J. Milstein is Associate Professor of Hebrew Bible and Ancient Near Eastern Studies in the Department of Classical, Near Eastern, and Religious Studies at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |