Ancient Literacies

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

14


Literacy Studies in Classics


The Last Twenty Years


Shirley Werner


Twenty-five years ago a distinguished historian could write, ‘‘There are


plenty of studies on literacy, none on its use, that I know of’’ (MacMullen


1982: 233). Nothing could be further from the truth today. Discussions


of material evidence—some of it long known, some more recently dis-


covered (includinginstrumentum domesticum, thelapis Satricanus, the


wooden tablets from Vindolanda, a handful of lead letters
1
)—have gone


hand in hand with theoretical analyses bearing on the broader functions and


cultural significance of these written materials within their societies. The


collectedworkbyDetienne(ed.)1988a,Lessavoirsdel’e ́criture,wasorganized


aroundthehypothesisthatwriting,asasocialpractice,isawayofthinkingthat


functioned at the center of social life in classical Greece and opened up new


possibilitiesfortheintellect.Thomas1989,OralTraditionandWrittenRecord


in Classical Athens, sought to provide an ‘‘extensive reinterpretation of the


placeofwritinginGreekcultureanditsrelationtooralcommunication.’’The


publication of Harris 1989a,Ancient Literacy—often cited as the most com-
prehensive treatment of the levels of Greek and Roman literacy to date—


promptedscholarstopursuetopicswhichhadnotbeentakenupinthatbook.


Humphrey(ed.)1991,LiteracyintheRomanWorld,adoptedHarris’sstudyas


a starting point for contributors’ discussions of literacy in the Roman world.


Thomas 1992 continued her groundbreaking work on the interaction be-


tween writing and oral tradition in ancient Greece with the publication of


Literacy and Orality in Ancient Greece, which contained chapters on oral


poetry; the coming of the alphabet; the relationship between literate and


oral; orality, performance, and the written text; and literacy and the state.


Pe ́barthe 2006, Cite ́, de ́mocratie et e ́criture: histoire de l’alphabe ́tisation



  1. Lapis Satricanus: Stibbe et al. 1980. On other kinds of primary evidence see the
    bibliographical index under the relevant topics (e.g., ‘‘Instrumentum Domesticum,’’ ‘‘Lead
    Letters,’’ ‘‘Ostraka,’’ ‘‘Tablets,’’ and ‘‘Vindolanda’’).


333

Free download pdf