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The Story of Petese Son of Petetum and Seventy other Good and Bad Stories

Autor Kim Ryholt
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 14 feb 1999
The book presents a complete edition of the three known versions of the ancient Egyptian narrative The Story of Petese son of Petetum and Seventy Other Good and Bad Stories, copied from the 4th century BC through the 2nd century AD. The narrative, written in Demotic, employs the literary device of a main story containing a series of brief stories presented to a specific character. In the main story, a prophet commits an act of blasphemy and is punished by the gods. Through magical means the prophet learns from Osiris that he has only 40 more days to live. On the fifth day the prophet creates a number of magical beings which he sends out to find 35 "good" stories and 35 "bad" stories, one pair of stories for each remaining day of his life. These stories are then presented to the prophet. In this respect it is remarkably similar to Arabian Nights.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9788772895277
ISBN-10: 8772895276
Pagini: 130
Ilustrații: 12 b/w pls
Dimensiuni: 150 x 250 x 15 mm
Editura: Museum Tusculanum Press
Colecția Museum Tusculanum Press
Locul publicării:Denmark

Recenzii

Considerable praise is due to the editor for the painstaking effort that he must have devoted to reconstructing an intelligible story from such a plethora of fragments. The fact that a comprehensible, albeit inevitably still very fragmentary, text has emerged from the scattered remains of these manuscripts is testimony to his acumen and endeavour ... we should be grateful to Kim Ryholt for providing such an excellent introduction to the Story of Petese and hope that his foraging among the fragments from Tebtunis in the University of Copenhagen and other collections around the world will continue to produce such fascinating insights into the once all-too-neglected world of Demotic literature.-Cary J. Martin, Journal of Egyptian Archeology vol. 90, 2005

Notă biografică

Kim Ryholt is associate professor at the Carsten Niebuhr Institute, University of Copenhagen.