Transferring performativity from speech to writing: illocutionary acts and incantation bowls

This article considers the interface between orality and textuality in the Aramaic incantation bowls, as well as the use of performative utterances in the texts of their spells. It demonstrates that writing and writtenness were central to bowl praxis as a whole, and argues that the bowls reflect a g...

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Veröffentlicht in:Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 2019-06, Vol.82 (2), p.233-244
1. Verfasser: Waller, Daniel James
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This article considers the interface between orality and textuality in the Aramaic incantation bowls, as well as the use of performative utterances in the texts of their spells. It demonstrates that writing and writtenness were central to bowl praxis as a whole, and argues that the bowls reflect a growing understanding of writing as performative in itself. In light of this, it suggests that the use of illocutionary acts in the bowl texts reflects the (gradual and ongoing) transfer of performativity from speech to writing in Sasanian Mesopotamia. Such acts of “word magic” in the bowls as oaths and curses are more likely to represent transitional language or a kind of “oral residue” than the verbatim representation of speech or spoken acts.
ISSN:0041-977X
1474-0699
DOI:10.1017/S0041977X19000363