Please note: In order to keep Hive up to date and provide users with the best features, we are no longer able to fully support Internet Explorer. The site is still available to you, however some sections of the site may appear broken. We would encourage you to move to a more modern browser like Firefox, Edge or Chrome in order to experience the site fully.

Patients and Performative Identities : At the Intersection of the Mesopotamian Technical Disciplines and Their Clients, Hardback Book

Patients and Performative Identities : At the Intersection of the Mesopotamian Technical Disciplines and Their Clients Hardback

Edited by J. Cale (Senior Lecturer in Assyriology, Free University of Berlin) Johnson

Part of the Rencontre Assyriologique Internationale series

Hardback

Description

The missing piece in so many histories of Mesopotamian technical disciplines is the client, who often goes unnoticed by present-day scholars seeking to reconstruct ancient disciplines in the Near East over millennia.

The contributions to this volume investigate how Mesopotamian medical specialists interacted with their patients and, in doing so, forged their social and professional identities.

The chapters in this book explore rituals for success at court, the social classes who made use of such rituals, and depictions of technical specialists on seal impressions and in later Greco-Roman iconography.

Several essays focus on Egalkura: rituals of entering the court, meant to invoke a favorable impression from the sovereign.

These include detailed surveys and comparative studies of the genre and its roots in the emergent astrological paradigm of the late first millennium BC.

The different media and modalities of interaction between technical specialists and their clients are also a central theme explored in detailed studies of the sickbed scene in the iconography of Mesopotamian cylinder seals and the transmission of specialized pharmaceutical knowledge from the Mesopotamian to the Greco-Roman world.

Offering an encyclopedic survey of ritual clients attested in the cuneiform textual record, this volume outlines both the Mesopotamian and the Greco-Roman social contexts in which these rituals were used.

It will be of interest to students of the history of medicine, as well as to students and scholars of ancient Mesopotamia. In addition to the editor, the contributors include Netanel Anor, Siam Bhayro, Strahil V.

Panayotov, Maddalena Rumor, Marvin Schreiber, JoAnn Scurlock, and Ulrike Steinert.

Information

Information