Ancient Near Eastern Weltanschauungen in contact and in contrast : rethinking ideology and propaganda in the ancient Near East /
Eará dahkkit: | , |
---|---|
Materiálatiipa: | Licensed eBooks |
Giella: | eaŋgalasgiella |
Almmustuhtton: |
Münster :
Zaphon,
2022.
|
Ráidu: | WEdge: Cutting-Edge Research in Cuneiform Studies ;
volume 2 |
Liŋkkat: | https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.2307/jj.18654723 |
Sisdoallologahallan:
- Ideology and propaganda : an introduction
- Mesopotamia. An ideological approach to the issue of propaganda in ancient Near Eastern studies : new answers to old questions
- Visual tools of power argumentation : models in contrast?
- Lugal Kiš and related matters : how ideological are royal titles?
- Assyrian royal inscriptions between royal propaganda and historical positioning
- Revisiting the representation of the "other" in "Sargon's eighth campaign"
- Are monsters propagandistic? Thoughts on the imagery of hyperreality in ancient Assyria
- Doorway creatures : crises, ideologies and persuasion in the neo-Assyrian palace
- Kingship in space and time at the northwest palace, Nimrud
- Bodies of propaganda? The visual embodiment of kingship in the neo-Assyrian empire
- "An object of wonder for all of the people". Ideology and propaganda in the neo-Assyrian and neo-Babylonian empires
- Anatolia and Egypt. The hero, the pious, the chosen, the legitimate : one ideology, different propagandae in the Hittite empire
- "Šawoška of Šamuh̲a, my Lady, caught him like a fish with a net" : usurping the throne and writing about it
- Hittite funeral traditions and afterlife beliefs in the context of Hittite cosmology
- ḥr.w n k3.w and bibrû : between tribute and gift. Ideological and propagandistic developments in Egypto-Hittite relationships
- Syria and the Levant. Friend of the king : revisiting the household terminology in the EA 288 and its socio-political implications
- Ideology and material culture in the late Bronze Age northern Levant : a pottery perspective
- Fragments of power : the use of pottery and the reconnaissance of the presence of the middle Assyrian state in the archaeological record
- Elite ideology, ritual manipulation and the anomalous cultic practices implemented by the Hazor rulership.