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Puritans in Babylon:
The Ancient Near East and American Intellectual Life, 1880-1930
Bruce Kuklick

Cloth | 1996 | This book is out of print | ISBN13: 978-0-691-02582-7
240 pp. | 6 x 9

e-Book | 2001 | $9.95 (Microsoft Reader format) | ISBN: 978-1-4008-0470-2
e-Book | 2001 | $9.95 (Adobe Reader format) | ISBN: 978-1-4008-0472-6

| Endorsements | Table of Contents

From the 1880s through the 1920s a motley collection of American scholars, soldiers of fortune, institutional bureaucrats, and financiers created the academic fields that give us our knowledge of the ancient Near East. Bruce Kuklick's new book begins with the story of the initial adventure of these determined investigators--a twelve-year dig near the Biblical Babylon, at Nippur, conducted at intervals from 1888 through 1900 and bankrolled by the Babylonian Exploration Fund. To unearth tens of thousands of cuneiform tablets, the leaders of this venture faced harsh living conditions in the desert and an academic war of each against all that was quickly begun at the site itself. As their knowledge increased, they risked their personal religious beliefs in the search for historical truth. Kuklick discusses their tribulations to illuminate two other contemporary developments: first, the maturation of the American university, particularly in contrast to its German counterpart; and second, the influence of religious-secular conflict on the ways in which Western scholarship appropriated or appreciated other cultures.

The Nippur expedition spawned unseemly (and entertaining) fights among the University of Pennsylvania, Johns Hopkins, Yale, Harvard, and Chicago for leadership in the study of the ancient Near East--not to mention disagreements with their own developing museums and an international scandal called the Hilprecht controversy. More significant than these quarrels was the concern for the meaning of history displayed in this period of Near Eastern scholarship. The field was linked to Biblical criticism and Judeo-Christian interests, and many of the orientalists originally possessed strong religious commitments--which some put aside as they struggled for objectivity. As recent critics have shown, "orientalism" was an example of the West's ability to appropriate the "other" for its own purposes. However, Kuklick's study demonstrates that the censure of orientalism hinges on modes of argumentation that scholars of the ancient Near East helped to legitimate, and at no small cost to themselves.

Endorsement:

"The author brilliantly captures the characters, institutions, discoveries, and debates that accompanied the social and intellectual history of Near Eastern archaeology in the United States."--C. C. Lamber-Karlovsky, Harvard University

Table of Contents:

LIST OF MAPS AND ILLUSTRATIONS xi
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS xiii
Introduction 3
PART ONE: FROM THE UNITED STATES TO BABYLONIA 11
Main Characters in the Story 17
ONE The Boys of Sumer, 1876-1888 19
TWO In Their Ruins, 1889-1892 35
THREE A Tale of Two Cities, 1893-1896 58
FOUR Hilprecht's Triumphs, 1897-1902 78
PART TWO: FROM BABYLONIA TO THE AMERICAN ANCIENT NEAR EAST 93
FIVE The Organization of Knowledge 99
SIX The Peters-Hilprecht Controversy, 1903-1910 123
SEVEN Archaeology and Objectivity 141
EIGHT Intellectual Property 158
NINE Orientalists and Their Civilizations 176
Conclusion 196
ABBREVIATIONS 204
NOTES 205
ESSAY ON METHODS AND SOURCES 235
INDEX 247

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File created: 4/23/2008

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