Project EVWRIT: Everyday Writing in Graeco-Roman and Late Antique Egypt (I - VIII AD). A Socio-Semiotic Study of Communicative Variation
2018-06-01 – 2024-05-31
- Abstract
Non-literary, ‘documentary’ texts from Ancient Egypt have provided and continue to provide a key witness for our knowledge of the administration, education, economy, etc. of the Ancient world. This project argues that since documentary texts represent originals, their external characteristics should also be brought into the interpretation. The project’s driving hypothesis is that ‘communicative variation’ – variation that is functionally insignificant but socially significant – enables the expression of social meaning. The main aim of the project is to analyse the nature of this communicative variation.
Show
Sort by
-
Correctness in comparison : negotiating linguistic norms in Greek from the Imperial Roman until the Later Byzantine period (I – XV AD)
Klaas Bentein (UGent) and Andrea Cuomo (UGent) -
Registerial hybridity in an Early Byzantine official archive : making a case for historical diaglossia?
-
- Book Chapter
- open access
Requests in the Qurra dossier : a cross-cultural pragmatic approach
(2025) Everyday communication in Antiquity : frames and framings. In Lexis Supplementi 18. p.245-290 -
- Book Chapter
- open access
Spacing out speech acts : textual units and their visual organization in Greek letters on papyrus
-
- Book Chapter
- open access
Frames, framings and beyond : afterthoughts and other discoursal ‘add-ons’ in Greek private letter writing
(2025) Everyday communication in Antiquity : frames and framings. In Lexis Supplementi 18. p.145-184