Between Orality and Literacy: Communication and Adaptation in Antiquity

Between Orality and Literacy: Communication and Adaptation in Antiquity
Title Between Orality and Literacy: Communication and Adaptation in Antiquity PDF eBook
Author Ruth Scodel
Publisher BRILL
Total Pages 397
Release 2014-06-05
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 9004270973

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The essays in Between Orality and Literacy address how oral and literature practices intersect as messages, texts, practices, and traditions move and change, because issues of orality and literacy are especially complex and significant when information is transmitted over wide expanses of time and space or adapted in new contexts. Their topics range from Homer and Hesiod to the New Testament and Gaius’ Institutes, from epic poetry and drama to vase painting, historiography, mythography, and the philosophical letter. Repeatedly they return to certain issues. Writing and orality are not mutually exclusive, and their interaction is not always in a single direction. Authors, whether they use writing or not, try to control the responses of a listening audience. A variable tradition can be fixed, not just by writing as a technology, but by such different processes as the establishment of a Panhellenic version of an Attic myth and a Hellenistic city’s creation of a single celebratory history.

Literacy and Orality in Ancient Greece

Literacy and Orality in Ancient Greece
Title Literacy and Orality in Ancient Greece PDF eBook
Author Rosalind Thomas
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Total Pages 222
Release 1992-09-25
Genre History
ISBN 9780521377423

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Explores the role of written and oral communication in Greece.

Epea and Grammata. Oral and Written Communication in Ancient Greece

Epea and Grammata. Oral and Written Communication in Ancient Greece
Title Epea and Grammata. Oral and Written Communication in Ancient Greece PDF eBook
Author Ian Worthington
Publisher BRILL
Total Pages 225
Release 2017-09-18
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 9004350926

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This volume deals with aspects of orality and oral traditions in ancient Greece, and is a selection of refereed papers from the fourth biennial Orality and Literacy in Ancient Greece conference, held at the University of Missouri Columbia in 2000. The book is divided into three parts: literature, rhetoric and society, and philosophy. The papers focus on genres such as epic poetry, drama, poetry and art, public oratory, legislative procedure, and Simplicius’ philosophy. All papers present new approaches to their topics or ask new and provocative questions.

The Muse Learns to Write

The Muse Learns to Write
Title The Muse Learns to Write PDF eBook
Author Eric Alfred Havelock
Publisher New Haven : Yale University Press
Total Pages 144
Release 1986-01-01
Genre Communication
ISBN 9780300037418

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Orality, Textuality, and the Homeric Epics

Orality, Textuality, and the Homeric Epics
Title Orality, Textuality, and the Homeric Epics PDF eBook
Author Jonathan L. Ready
Publisher Oxford University Press
Total Pages 368
Release 2019-07-25
Genre Poetry
ISBN 019257194X

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Written texts of the Iliad and the Odyssey achieved an unprecedented degree of standardization after 150 BCE, but what about Homeric texts prior to the emergence of standardized written texts? Orality, Textuality, and the Homeric Epics sheds light on that earlier history by drawing on scholarship from outside the discipline of classical studies to query from three different angles what it means to speak of Homeric poetry together with the word "text". Part I utilizes work in linguistic anthropology on oral texts and oral intertextuality to illuminate both the verbal and oratorical landscapes our Homeric poets fashion in their epics and what the poets were striving to do when they performed. Looking to folkloristics, part II examines modern instances of the textualization of an oral traditional work in order to reconstruct the creation of written versions of the Homeric poems through a process that began with a poet dictating to a scribe. Combining research into scribal activity in other cultures, especially in the fields of religious studies and medieval studies, with research into performance in the field of linguistic anthropology, part III investigates some of the earliest extant texts of the Homeric epics, the so-called wild papyri. By looking at oral texts, dictated texts, and wild texts, this volume traces the intricate history of Homeric texts from the Archaic to the Hellenistic period, long before the emergence of standardized written texts, in a comparative and interdisciplinary study that will benefit researchers in a number of disciplines across the humanities.

Theatrocracy

Theatrocracy
Title Theatrocracy PDF eBook
Author Peter Meineck
Publisher Routledge
Total Pages 233
Release 2017-07-14
Genre History
ISBN 1315466554

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Theatrocracy is a book about the power of the theatre, how it can affect the people who experience it, and the societies within which it is embedded. It takes as its model the earliest theatrical form we possess complete plays from, the classical Greek theatre of the fifth century BCE, and offers a new approach to understanding how ancient drama operated in performance and became such an influential social, cultural, and political force, inspiring and being influenced by revolutionary developments in political engagement and citizen discourse. Key performative elements of Greek theatre are analyzed from the perspective of the cognitive sciences as embodied, live, enacted events, with new approaches to narrative, space, masks, movement, music, words, emotions, and empathy. This groundbreaking study combines research from the fields of the affective sciences – the study of human emotions – including cognitive theory, neuroscience, psychology, artificial intelligence, psychiatry, and cognitive archaeology, with classical, theatre, and performance studies. This book revisits what Plato found so unsettling about drama – its ability to produce a theatrocracy, a "government" of spectators – and argues that this was not a negative but an essential element of Athenian theatre. It shows that Athenian drama provided a place of alterity where audiences were exposed to different viewpoints and radical perspectives. This perspective was, and is, vital in a freethinking democratic society where people are expected to vote on matters of state. In order to achieve this goal, the theatre offered a dissociative and absorbing experience that enhanced emotionality, deepened understanding, and promoted empathy. There was, and still is, an urgent imperative for theatre.

Connected Learning

Connected Learning
Title Connected Learning PDF eBook
Author L. Lynn Thigpen
Publisher Wipf and Stock Publishers
Total Pages 174
Release 2020-04-21
Genre Education
ISBN 1532679394

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How does the world's oral majority--adults with limited formal education (ALFE)--really prefer to learn? Few pause long enough to ask those who eschew print. The result of scholarly research and prolonged immersion in the Cambodian culture, Connected Learning exposes the truth about orality--the shame associated with limited formal education; the unfortunate misnomer that is orality; the place of spirituality, grace, and hope; and the obvious but overlooked learning preferences. ALFE have different ways of learning and knowing, a different epistemology and culture from print learners, even though we all begin alike. The choice is not between Ong's orality or literacy, but between learning from people or from print. Dr. Thigpen, a veteran cross-cultural worker, shares remedies for the hegemony and inequities unwittingly fostered by the literate minority. In a dominant culture where learning from people is prime, how can educators with a preference for print adapt? Providing an important tool in the Learning Quadrants diagram, Connected Learning advises teaching to the quadrant and calls for seven necessary shifts in teaching. Anyone versed in orality will admit these findings have "global implications and applications" (Steffen). The reader who heeds will positively impact a huge portion of humanity.