Much Ado about Marduk : Questioning Discourses of Royalty in First Millennium Mesopotamian Literature

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Scholars often assume that the nature of Mesopotamian kingship was such that questioning royal authority was impossible. This volume challenges that general assumption, by presenting an analysis of the motivations,methods, and motifs behind a scholarly discourse about kingship that arose in the final stages of the last Mesopotamian empires. The focus of the volume is the proliferation of a literature that problematizes authority in the Neo-Assyrian period, when texts first begin to specifically explore various modalities for critique of royalty. This development is symptomatic of a larger discourse about the limits of power that emerges after the repatriation of Marduk's statue to Babylon during the reign of Nebuchadnezzar I in the 12th century BCE. From this point onwards, public attitudes toward Marduk provide a framework for the definition of proper royal behavior, and become a point of contention between Assyria and Babylonia. It is in this historical and political context that several important Akkadian compositions are placed. The texts are analyzed from a new perspective that sheds light on their original milieux and intended functions.

Author(s): Jennifer Finn
Series: Studies in Ancient Near Eastern Records 16
Edition: 1
Publisher: De Gruyter
Year: 2017

Language: English
Pages: 252
Tags: history, ancient, middle east, religion, biblical criticism, biblical interpretation, old testament, assyria, babylonia, literature

Preface......Page 5
Contents......Page 7
Standard Abbreviations......Page 9
Chapter 1. Reading Counterdiscursive Texts in the First Millennium BC......Page 11
Chapter 2. The Kassite Revolution......Page 52
Chapter 3. The Library of Assurbanipal and the Counterdiscursive Landscape......Page 88
Chapter 4. The “Babylonian Problem” and Scribal Dialogues of Counterdiscursiveness......Page 106
Chapter 5. Counterdiscursiveness beyond belles lettres in and out of Nineveh......Page 136
Chapter 6. Textual Hegemony and the Counterdiscursive Public......Page 160
Epilogue. The Legacy of Late Akkadian Countertexts......Page 182
Bibliography......Page 214
Index......Page 245