Orality, Direct Speech and the Kumarbi Cycle
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Alfonso Archi
Abstract
The so-called Kumarbi Cycle was not a closed system. To it belonged compositions of different periods and places. The Song of Kumarbi, and perhaps that of Ea and the Beast, were composed in Eastern Syria, under the influence of the Babylonian epic. All the other songs are later, and composed in Western Syria; the Song of KAL/LAMMA had its origin probably in Karkamiš. They had not educational purposes, in the sense that they were not used to train younger scribe. It is argued that they were recited in some religious occasions and fulfilled the common need of narrating and listening. The extensive use of direct speech in such songs responded to the requirements of an oral performance, but does not necessarily reflect techniques of oral composition.
© by Akademie Verlag, Berlin, Germany
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Articles in the same Issue
- Hurritische Hemden in der keilschriftlichen Tradition
- Orality, Direct Speech and the Kumarbi Cycle
- Warum das Kupfer den Schmied verflucht eine motivgeschichtliche Studie
- Notes on Hurro-Urartian Phonology and Morphology
- Die reliefverzierte Tüllenkanne aus Uruk und ihre Datierung
- Local Imitations and Foreign Imported Goods. Some problems and new questions on Red Lustrous Wheel-made Ware in the light of the new excavations of the Southern Step Trench at Yumuktepe/Mersin
- Local Settlement Transitions in Southeastern Anatolia during the Late Third and Early Second Millennium BC
- Neue Kenntnisse hethitischer Orakeltexte 2
- Ein neues hethitisches Stempelsiegel aus Anatolien
- Der Mann des Wettergottes und der Taube (CTH 652)
- Kann Armā mit Haremhab gleichgesetzt werden?
- The appellate process in a legal record {di til-la} from Ur III Umma
- The Siege of Razama An example of aggressive defence in Old-Babylonian times