• Medientyp: Dissertation; E-Book; Elektronische Hochschulschrift
  • Titel: Ethiopian Abǝnnät Manuscripts: Organizational Structure, Language Use, and Orality ; Äthiopische Abǝnnät Manuskripte: Organisatorische Struktur, Sprachegebrauch und Oralität
  • Beteiligte: Kebede, Gidena Mesfin [VerfasserIn]
  • Erschienen: Staats- und Universitätsbibliothek Hamburg Carl von Ossietzky, 2017-01-01
  • Sprache: Englisch
  • Schlagwörter: Orality ; seltene Bücher ; Abinnet ; Structure ; Magic ; 18.71 Hamito-semitische Sprachen und Literaturen: Allgemeines ; 06.17 Orientalische Handschriftenkunde ; Ethiopian
  • Entstehung:
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  • Beschreibung: Ethiopic literature has a category that I have called abǝnnät in this dissertation. I have opted to use this very term on grounds of internal textual evidence, secondary literature and practitioners’ ‘däbtäras’’ knowledge. This genre which used to be called ‘magic literature’ and sometimes asmat is a rich area of research. As a result of a mesh of cultures and religions from which its contents are drawn, this genre is textually rich. Research on this area has so far been directed towards the edition of individual texts which is limited in scope and variety. This dissertation focuses on the study of the structural set up of individual texts or abǝnnäts, their language use and the orality involved in using them. The structural approach has shown that an abǝnnät comprises parts (which I called sections) such as the introductory formula, the asmat ‘names’, the ṭälsäm ‘images and figures’, the Brillenbuchstaben ‘letters with eye glasses’, the caution, the gäbir ‘effectuation’ to mention the main ones. From this we clearly see that the asmat which was used to name the genre is only a constituent part. This has helped me to argue against the thus far purported functional dichotomies such as ‘magico-religious’ vs ‘magical’. Such categories can’t be taken without a question as the structure and function of the texts discussed coalesce into what I have called abǝnnät. It has further been shown that some constituent parts of each individual text are recent additions, at least textually, though they were part of the encoded text but used to be preserved orally. One of such sections is the so called gäbir ‘effectuation’, that was originally oral. This section was kept oral as an element of the secrecy of the texts. The languages of composition are used in such a way that Geʿez (Ethiopic) is the language of the core abǝnnät content and Amharic is the language of the effectuation ‘gäbir’. Languages used in the so called asmat are also ascribed esoteric value. Herbal lists have also been rendered in Tigrigna which is the ...
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