Description:
Ancient Knowledge Networks is a book about how knowledge travels, in minds and bodies as well as in writings. It explores the forms knowledge takes and the meanings it accrues, and how these meanings are shaped by the peoples who use it.
Brief description:
Eleanor Robson is professor of ancient Middle Eastern history at University College London, where she codirects the Nahrein Network, which promotes collaborative, interdisciplinary research on Middle Eastern history and heritage. She is the author of Mathematics in Ancient Iraq: A Social History.
Review Quotes:
'The book complicates and humanises the categories that have streamlined the study of cuneiform scholarship. In its own words, this is a book about 'how knowledge travels' through the people who carry it, their writings, their responsibilities and their benefactors - human and divine. It animates the lives of scholars through their movements, their works and the movements of their works, until the end of cuneiform culture in Babylon and Uruk. Ancient Knowledge Networks is a study of the history of knowledge that restores context to text - an invaluable re-evaluation of the sources to the modern scholars of Assyria and Babylonia.'
History Today