Rethinking Modern Graffiti through Ancient

K. Stern
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Abstract

This chapter argues that modern graffiti should be reconsidered through a reformed understanding of ancient examples. It explains how graffiti preserve selective information about the ways that certain Jews operated within their surrounding environments, and serve as a reminder that Jewish life in antiquity may resemble its modern incarnations far less (and in other cases, far more) than we might assume. Writings on walls, whether from from the Dura-Europos synagogue or from burial caves, theaters, and hippodromes, can shed light on how ancient Jews acted, and felt, in ways that were both similar to and different from their neighbors. This chapter asserts that adjusting notions of what qualifies as a source for the historiography of ancient Jewish populations necessitates an expansion of information available for enquiry in the ancient or modern world.
从古代重新思考现代涂鸦
本章认为,应该通过对古代例子的改革理解来重新考虑现代涂鸦。它解释了涂鸦是如何保存某些犹太人在周围环境中运作方式的选择性信息,并提醒人们,古代犹太人的生活可能比我们想象的要少得多(在其他情况下,远比我们想象的要多得多)。墙上的文字,无论是来自Dura-Europos犹太教堂,还是来自墓葬洞穴、剧院和竞技场,都能揭示古代犹太人的行为和感受,他们的方式与邻居既相似又不同。本章断言,调整关于什么是古代犹太人口的历史编纂来源的概念,需要扩大古代或现代世界的可用信息。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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