从始至终:古埃及陪葬文字的生成与传播

IF 0.3 3区 哲学 Q2 HISTORY Journal of Ancient Near Eastern Religions Pub Date : 2016-03-18 DOI:10.1163/15692124-12341274
Foy Scalf
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引用次数: 4

摘要

古埃及的丧葬文字延续了两千多年的传统,为研究古代近东地区的作曲和传承提供了极好的数据集。清晰的证据表明抄写在传播过程中的重要性和机制。不太清楚的是,新作品是如何被创造出来的。在某些情况下,学者、评论和训诂的增加产生了旧文本的新版本。棺材文字(CT)法术335和死亡之书(BD)法术17之间的连续性很好地说明了这一点。然而,在其他情况下,大型系列首次以书面形式出现,在其制作的早期阶段几乎没有任何暗示。这对于金字塔文本(PT)来说是正确的,其预先书写的形式只能是假设的。幸运的是,从概念到文本化的零碎步骤部分保存在罗马时期埃及的一个相对较少研究的语料库中,有时被称为《呼吸之书》。尽管这幅作品明显代表了PT-CT-BD传统的最后阶段,但抄写员并没有抄袭前人的作品来创作这幅作品。相反,一种新的构图没有直接的平行。此外,新的文本从来没有固定下来,因为50个独立的例子证明了一组核心公式,可以随意添加,减少或重新排列。该语料库的差异反映了希腊罗马埃及类似丧葬手稿的多样性日益增长的趋势。这种差异的一部分可以证明来自于一个活跃的口头传统,我认为,正是这种口头传统,为新的作品提供了原材料,比如《大众呼吸之书》。因此,本文将通过观察古埃及丧葬文学的最后阶段来解决文本传统是如何开始的。
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From the Beginning to the End: How to Generate and Transmit Funerary Texts in Ancient Egypt
With a continuous tradition spanning more than two millennia, funerary texts from ancient Egypt offer an excellent data set for studying how compositions were composed and passed on in the ancient Near East. Clear evidence demonstrates the importance and mechanics of scribal copying in the transmission process. What remain less clear are the methods by which new compositions were created. In some cases, the accretion of scholia, commentary, and exegesis produced new versions of old texts. This is well illustrated by the continuum between Coffin Text ( CT ) spell 335 and Book of the Dead ( BD ) spell 17. In other cases, however, large collections appear in writing for the first time showing few hints at the earlier stages of their production. This is true for the Pyramid Texts ( PT ), whose pre-written forms can only be hypothesized. Fortunately, fragmentary steps from conception to textualization are partially preserved for a relatively little studied corpus from Roman Period Egypt, sometimes known by the title the Demotic Book of Breathing. Despite clearly representing the final stage in the PT-CT-BD tradition, scribes did not create this composition by copying from its predecessors. Instead, a new composition was crafted without direct parallel. In addition, the new text was never fixed, as fifty separate exemplars attest to a core set of formulae that could be added to, subtracted from, or rearranged at will. The variance in this corpus reflects a growing trend toward multiplicity in similar funerary manuscripts from Greco-Roman Egypt. A portion of this variance can be demonstrated to derive from an active oral tradition and it is this oral tradition, I will argue, that provided the raw material for new compositions such as the Demotic Book of Breathing. This paper will therefore address how textual traditions began by looking at the very end of funerary literature in ancient Egypt.
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来源期刊
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期刊介绍: The Journal of Ancient Near Eastern Religions (JANER) focuses on the religions of the area commonly referred to as the Ancient Near East encompassing Egypt, Mesopotamia, Syria-Palestine, and Anatolia, as well as immediately adjacent areas under their cultural influence, from prehistoric times onward to the beginning of the common era. JANER thus explicitly aims to include not only the Biblical, Hellenistic and Roman world as part of Ancient Near Eastern civilization but also the impact of its religions on the western Mediterranean. JANER is the only scholarly journal specifically and exclusively addressing this range of topics.
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