Dialogue of Pessimism
Mesopotamia, Akkadian language, Akkadian language, Assyria, Plato, Shamash, Epic of Gilgamesh, Sumer
978-613-5-96264-2
6135962647
120
2011-06-01
39.00 €
eng
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Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. The Dialogue of Pessimism is an ancient Mesopotamian dialogue between a master and his servant that expresses the futility of human action. It has parallels with biblical wisdom literature. The Dialogue is a loosely poetic composition in Akkadian, written soon after 1000 BC in Mesopotamia. It was discovered in five different clay tablet manuscripts written in the cuneiform script. The text is well-preserved, with only 15 of its 86 lines being fragmentary. Two textual versions seem to survive, as a Babylonian tablet is substantially different to Assyrian versions. Its likely Akkadian title was arad mitanguranni, the repeated phrase at the beginning of every stanza.
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