200 pp. • 6 illus. • 3 tables
5.5 X 8.5” • cloth
ISBN 1-931707-67-7
ISBN 978-1-931707-67-1
$29.95
.jpg)
|
Time
and Temporality in the Ancient World
Ralph M. Rosen, editor

Considering the topic of time in antiquity, juxtaposing cultures
and societies, yields remarkable intersections, continuities, and
discontinuities in the ways people have engaged with temporality.
One of the most persistent dichotomies we find across many pre-modern
societies is that between cyclical and teleological time—time
marching inexorably forward, toward a goal, and the markers of nature
that seem repetitive, cyclical, and fundamentally stable. Over the
millennia much ingenuity has been directed at these models.
Specific examinations range from the construction of time and space
in prehistory, Roman Britain, quantifications of time in Assyria
and Babylonia, through aspects of time in classical India, the Hebrew
Bible, China, Greece, and the Roman Empire.
|
|
With
Contributions by
John C. Barrett, University of
Sheffield.
Marc Brettler, Brandeis University.
Chris Gosden, Pitt Rivers Museum, Oxford.
Astrid Möller, University of Freiburg.
David Pankenier, Lehigh University.
Alex Purves, University of California, Los Angeles.
Eleanor Robson, University of Cambridge.
Ludo Rocher, University of Pennsylvania.
Ralph M. Rosen, University of Pennsylvania.
Michele Renee Salzman, University of California,
Riverside. |