Putting intentions in their place: materialising meaning through spatial dynamics in Appeals to the Dead

McDonald, A. (2024) Putting intentions in their place: materialising meaning through spatial dynamics in Appeals to the Dead. In: Zamacona, C. G. (ed.) Variablilty in the Earlier Egyptian Mortuary Texts. Series: Harvard Egyptological Studies. Brill: Leiden, pp. 82-116. ISBN 9789004677975 (doi: 10.1163/9789004677982_005)

Full text not currently available from Enlighten.

Abstract

Within the genre that comprises written Appeals to the Dead (known traditionally, and much too restrictively, as Letters to the Dead), much variation is to be seen. It is present in unusual orthographies of individual words, tailored through idiosyncratic determinatives and in directional manipulations enacted at the level of signs, but also manifest across entire texts that can be shaped by the intentions of the writer, often working sympathetically with a medium of an equally unusual nature. After a brief discussion of how the corpus should be defined and what terms we might usefully use, this paper explores the semantic implications of the placement of written content, specifically the spatial orientation of signs, words, and texts as a whole, and considers the reasons behind materialising meaning in this way.

Item Type:Book Sections
Status:Published
Glasgow Author(s) Enlighten ID:McDonald, Dr Angela
Authors: McDonald, A.
College/School:College of Arts & Humanities > School of Humanities > Classics
Publisher:Brill
ISBN:9789004677975
Published Online:24 October 2023

University Staff: Request a correction | Enlighten Editors: Update this record