ORALITY, WRITTEN LITERACY, AND EARLY SICILIAN CURSE TABLETS

IF 0.1 4区 历史学 0 CLASSICS GREECE & ROME Pub Date : 2022-03-07 DOI:10.1017/s0017383521000218
Jessica L. Lamont
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Abstract

This article examines the relationship between oral traditions of cursing and the oldest Greek curse tablets from Selinous and Himera in western Sicily. As much early Greek writing is thought to record or reflect the spoken word, it is perhaps unexpected that these early Sicilian texts carry few signs of orality or speech. There are no verbs of speaking, incanting, cursing, singing, binding; no deictic language; no metre. Rather, the oldest curse tablets in the Greek world show clear signs of written literacy. Sicilian curse tablets from 500–450 bce employ verbs of writing to curse their victims (ἐνγράφω, ‘I inscribe’; καταγράφω, ‘I write down’; ἀπογράφω, ‘I enrol’), and exhibit textual distortion, scribal symbols, abbreviations, and columnar lists of names – features that ground these texts in the realm of writing. It is suggested that Greek curse practice developed alongside and in response to the spread of legal writing in the late sixth-century law courts of western Sicily.
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口头,书面读写能力,早期西西里诅咒碑
本文考察了口头诅咒传统与西西里岛西部塞尔诺和希米拉最古老的希腊诅咒石碑之间的关系。正如许多早期希腊文字被认为是记录或反映口语一样,这些早期西西里文本几乎没有口头或言语的迹象,这也许是出乎意料的。没有口语、咒语、诅咒、唱歌、捆绑等动词;没有指示语言;没有米。相反,希腊世界最古老的诅咒石碑显示出明显的书面识字迹象。公元前500年至450年的西西里诅咒石碑使用书写动词诅咒受害者(ἐγράφω,“I题字”;καταγράφω,‘我记下来’;ἀπ?γράφω,“我注册了”),并表现出文本扭曲、书写符号、缩写和名字的柱状列表——这些特征使这些文本在写作领域奠定了基础。有人认为,希腊的诅咒实践是随着6世纪末西西里岛西部法院法律文书的传播而发展起来的。
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来源期刊
GREECE & ROME
GREECE & ROME CLASSICS-
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
35
期刊介绍: Published with the wider audience in mind, Greece & Rome features informative and lucid articles on ancient history, art, archaeology, religion, philosophy, and the classical tradition. Although its content is of interest to professional scholars, undergraduates and general readers who wish to be kept informed of what scholars are currently thinking will find it engaging and accessible. All Greek and Latin quotations are translated. A subscription to Greece & Rome includes a supplement of New Surveys in the Classics. These supplements have covered a broad range of topics, from key figures like Homer and Virgil, to subjects such as Greek tragedy, thought and science, women, slavery, and Roman religion. The 2007 New Survey will be Comedy by Nick Lowe.
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