Reading Sumerian Poetry

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Cornell University Press, 1998 - Literary Criticism - 205 pages

An international authority on Sumerian culture, Jeremy Black here provides an introduction to the world's oldest poetry. Sumer, in southern Iraq, was the first literate culture in civilization, dating as far back as 2500 b.c. Its literature, which is made up almost entirely of poetry, was lost for nearly two millennia; rediscovery and decipherment of the ancient texts began in the nineteenth century.

Black is fully aware of the difficulties of applying modern literary methods to the study of ancient literature, emphasizing theoretical problems that arise from contemporary expectations of a unitary text. Acknowledging the fragmentary nature of Sumerian poetry, he turns what might be considered a serious obstacle to the enjoyment of the literature into an asset. The book features Black's complete English translations of Lugalbanda, a narrative poem about the eponymous hero and his encounter with a monstrous bird, and its sequel, Lugalbanda in the Mountain Cave. Looking closely at the imagery in the Lugalbanda poems, Black perceives in them a rich and sophisticated poetic imagination and technique, which, far from being in any sense "primitive," are so complex as to resist modern literary analysis.

 

Contents

The study of imagery
3
PART
38
Literary criticism in practice
67
Conclusion
170
Translation of Lugalbanda in the mountain cave 176
185
Index
201
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About the author (1998)

Jeremy Black is University Lecturer in Akkadian and a Fellow of Wolfson College, Oxford. He has published several works on Sumerian and Babylonian literature and religion.

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