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Ritual, Performance, and Politics in the Ancient Near East

Ritual, Performance, and Politics in the Ancient Near East

Ritual, Performance, and Politics in the Ancient Near East

Lauren Ristvet, University of Pennsylvania
December 2014
Hardback
9781107065215
$120.00
USD
Hardback
USD
eBook

    In this book, Lauren Ristvet rethinks the narratives of state formation by investigating the interconnections between ritual, performance, and politics in the ancient Near East. She draws on a wide range of archaeological, iconographic, and cuneiform sources to show how ritual performance was not set apart from the real practice of politics; it was politics. Rituals provided an opportunity for elites and ordinary people to negotiate political authority. Descriptions of rituals from three periods explore the networks of signification that informed different societies. From circa 2600 to 2200 BC, pilgrimage made kingdoms out of previously isolated villages. Similarly, from circa 1900 to 1700 BC, commemorative ceremonies legitimated new political dynasties by connecting them to a shared past. Finally, in the Hellenistic period, the traditional Babylonian Akitu festival was an occasion for Greek-speaking kings to show that they were Babylonian and for Babylonian priests to gain significant power.

    • Covers both ritual and politics
    • Rethinks the political complexity of the time period
    • Focuses on the archaeology of performance

    Product details

    December 2014
    Hardback
    9781107065215
    331 pages
    260 × 182 × 20 mm
    0.86kg
    42 b/w illus. 10 maps
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • 1. Performing politics
    • 2. Movement
    • 3. Memory
    • 4. Tradition
    • 5. Community.
      Author
    • Lauren Ristvet , University of Pennsylvania

      Lauren Ristvet is Assistant Professor of Anthropology at the University of Pennsylvania and Robert H. Dyson, Jr, Assistant Curator of Near Eastern Archaeology at the Penn Museum. She has directed archaeological surveys and excavations at major Bronze Age and classical period sites in Syria (Tell Leilan), Azerbaijan (OÄŸlanqala) and Iraq (Satu Qala). She is the author of In the Beginning: World History from Human Evolution to the First States (2007), and her articles have been published in journals including Antiquity, the American Journal of Archaeology, BASOR (the Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research) and World Archaeology.