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The Ancient Near East in the Nineteenth Century: I. Claiming and Conquering (Hebrew Bible Monographs)

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Gathering interest

Overview

At the beginning of the nineteenth century, little was known of the ancient Near East except for what was preserved in the Bible and Classical literature. By the end of that century, an amazing transformation had occurred: the basic outline of ancient Near Eastern history was now understood and the material culture of the region was recognizable to the general public. This three-volume study explores the various ways by which non-specialists would have encountered ancient Egypt, Mesopotamia, and the Holy Land and how they derived and constructed meaning from those discoveries. McGeough challenges the simplistic view that the experience of the ancient Near East was solely a matter of ‘othering’ and shows how different people claimed the Near East as their own space and how connections were drawn between the ancient and contemporary worlds.

Volume I traces how the study of the ancient Near East developed into a professional discipline and how interpretative frameworks were gradually standardized throughout the nineteenth century. Some of the best-sellers of the period were accounts of the early explorers of the region and, beginning with the Napoleonic expedition, the book examines how ancient Near Eastern discoveries were communicated to the public. It looks at how archaeological reporting was shaped in this period and how the study of the ancient Near East was employed to understand issues of progress and decline and was referenced in the political and social satire of the period. It also documents the growth of middle-class tourism to the region and considers how the changing experiences of travel impacted Near Eastern studies. Throughout, the book observes how the ancient Near East mirrored and subverted British society and played a role in European and North American thinking about their places in a larger global and historical perspective.

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  • Explores the various ways by which non-specialists would have encountered ancient Egypt, Mesopotamia, and the Holy Land.
  • Traces how the study of the ancient Near East developed into a professional discipline.
  • Shows how interpretative frameworks were gradually standardized throughout the nineteenth century.
  • List of Illustrations
  • Preface to Volume I
  • Map of the Ancient Near East
  • Introduton to Volume I
  • Part I: (Re)Discovering the Ancient Near East
  • Chapter 1 After Aboukir: Paris As Memphis and The Past As Empire
  • Chapter 2 Preconceptions: The Near East in The Bible and Classical Literature
  • Chapter 3 The Strongman, the Geographer, and the Diplomat: Giovanni Belzoni, Edward Robinson, and Austen Henry Layard
  • Chapter 4 Progress and Decline; or, How the Whigs and the Anthropologists Claimed the Near East
  • Chapter 5 Victorian Periodicals and the Birth of Archeological Journalism
  • Chapter 6 John Bull and His Mommies: The Ancient Near East in Political and Social Satire
  • Part II: Exploring the Ancient Near East
  • Chapter 7 From Traveller to Tourist in the Near East
  • Chapter 8 From Tourist to Scholar: Amelia Edwards and Women Travellers
  • Chapter 9 Science Is Measurement: The First ‘Pyramidiots’
  • Chapter 10 From gentleman Scholars to Scholarly Societies: Legitimating the Socially Marginal and Excluding Marginal Readings
  • Conclusion to Volume I
  • Bibliography for Volume I
  • Index of Biblical References and Other Ancient Texts
  • Index of Authors
  • Index of Subjects

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    $14.99

    Digital list price: $29.50
    Save $14.51 (49%)

    Gathering interest