Enheduana and the Invention of Authorship
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.21825/aj.v8i1.11486Abstract
The first known author, Enheduana, gained a central place in the literary culture of ancient Iraq long after the death of Sumerian, the language in which her poems were written. The essay argues that her authorship served to depict the Sumerian literary heritage as a tangible object that could be acquired by people who did not speak Sumerian as their native language, since Enheduana’s poems condensed a cacophony of independent traditions into a single entity. The process primarily took place in the city of Nippur in the troubled decades after 1740 BC, as the ancient scholars desperately needed to assert their importance. They did so by claiming special access to Sumerian literature, and authorship served as an ideal vehicle to represent that literature and that access. In short, Enheduana became a body and a bridge for Sumerian literature, condensing it into a single object and allowing it to move into a new cultural context.Downloads
Published
2019-07-09
How to Cite
Helle, S. (2019). Enheduana and the Invention of Authorship. uthorship, 8(1). https://doi.org/10.21825/aj.v8i1.11486
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Copyright (c) 2019 Sophus Helle

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Authorship allows authors to hold both the copyright and the publishing rights over their work without restrictions. However, a mention of their first publication in Authorship will be highly appreciated.