Thursday, April 29, 2021

K.L. Noll on the importance of knowing the "mundane" everyday life of Ancient Cultures

 

 

One must research ancient events, and ancient events are very difficult to research. Not only have all eyewitnesses passed from the scene centuries before, but the cultural assumptions of ancient people have disappeared as well. Those cultural assumptions of ancient people have disappeared as well. Those cultural assumptions are crucial, for they gave meaning to everything an ancient person did or said. Think of all the routine activities in your own life. Would you bother with most of them if you were suddenly transported out of your culture and into a wholly different one, with alien values and assumptions? Your deeds and words have meaning to you because they are grounded in a particular social context; out of that context, they become meaningless. It is this same subjective meaning that brings evidence from the ancient past to life. If historians examine an artifact or document from ancient times but do not know the cultural values that made the artifacts or documents important, how can they evaluate its significance? Both artifact and document were part of a network of interrelated activities and their associated meanings. A modern historian must develop tools for recapturing as much of that network as possible. (K.L. Noll, Canaan and Israel in Antiquity: An Introduction [The Biblical Seminar 83; London: Sheffield Academic Press, 2001], 41-42)