Sumerian cuneiform, Egyptian hieroglyphics, manuscripts in Aramaic, Arabic, and Hebrew, the illuminated Christian Gospels, the Talmud, the Koran—with these forms and collections of writing came the expectation that a person would read them out loud and would, in a manner of speaking, conjure their reality. In his book A History of Reading, Alberto Manguel points out that Aramaic and Hebrew, the “primordial” languages of the Bible, draw no distinction between reading and speaking. The same word stands for both. Buddhism and Hinduism also give an exalted place to the spoken word.

The opening words of The Odyssey—“Sing in me, Muse, and through me tell the story”—make this clear: The storyteller is acknowledging at the start that the tale he tells is not his own, and that he hopes for divine assistance in telling it well.

I think it is pretty interesting that people engaged with reading this way. The author of this article notes that it becomes a living story. This also had the benefit of reaching persons that could not read. I wonder if the content was remembered more vividly through both seeing and hearing the words.

  • @givesomefucks
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    1211 months ago

    Speaking engages different parts of your brain, and can help you think stuff out.

    Programmers call it “rubber duck debugging” where they explain the issue to an inanimate object, and talking it out helps them come up with a solution.

    If everyone was reading like this, then stuff was written with that in mind

    So it’s not like reading a book ouloud today would be as good. But for crazy old texts like this…

    Fuck it, read that shit out loud like it was meant to be