학술논문

Materializing Ancient Documents.
Document Type
Article
Source
Daedalus; Spring2016, Vol. 145 Issue 2, p79-87, 9p
Subject
Papyrus manuscripts
Antiquities
Taphonomy
Manners & customs
Scrolls
Language
ISSN
00115266
Abstract
Two materially oriented revolutions have transformed the study of ancient documents in recent decades: first, a new interest in the ancient production of written artifacts; and second, the concern with the archaeological contexts, and more particularly the taphonomy-that is, the processes at work in the burial-of those same objects. The first, largely driven by the availability of digital images, has given life to the study of ancient writing as a cultural and social phenomenon and to the social life of written objects. In the process, connections between literary and documentary texts have come to the fore and distinctions between these categories have eroded. The second revolution began with an interest in what archaeological contexts of excavated papyri could tell us about the history of the texts, but it has evolved to see the texts themselves as artifacts engaged in an iterative dialogue with both the contexts and other objects found in them. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]