Week 1 Reading and Further Resources
Reading
Once you have listened to both recorded lectures -- Part 1 and Part 2 -- please read the following songs that appear in the Bible:
Judges 5 ~ Song of Deborah
Exodus 15:1-21 ~ Song of Miriam
1 Samuel 2: 1-10 ~ Song of Hannah
Luke 1: 46-56 ~ Song of Mary
Further Resources
These links are for exploring on your own in the future. See where your interest and curiosity lead you. Let any one of these links be a starting point for your own exploration and research.
On Enheduanna
A short video on the Morgan Library exhibit "She Who Wrote: Enheduanna and women of Mesopotamia ca. 3400-2000 B.C."
A lecture by the curator of the Morgan exhibit, Sidney Babcock
More resources from the Morgan exhibit "She Who Wrote"
Enheduana: The Complete Poems of the World's First Author by Sophus Helle.
On Seshat
World History Encyclopedia entry on Seshat
More on Seshat from a non-academic source
The Sounds of Her Songs
As you activate your imagination and conjure up the storytellers of herstory, it might help to have these snippets about early instruments and songs.
A short video about how scholars have reconstructed the earliest known song -- go to 3:16 to hear a haunting version of this hymn-to-the-goddess.
An article on the musical instruments of Ur
A performance on a replica of the silver lyre of Ur
A lesson on the sounds of Egyptian precussion instruments -- go to 1:53 to hear a hand drum similar to what Miriam and the women of Israel may have played.
Lesson Summary
After listening to two recorded lectures, explore the following songs from the Bible:
- Judges 5 - Song of Deborah
- Exodus 15:1-21 - Song of Miriam
- 1 Samuel 2:1-10 - Song of Hannah
- Luke 1:46-56 - Song of Mary
Additional resources for future exploration:
- Learn more about Enheduanna from a short video on the Morgan Library exhibit, "She Who Wrote: Enheduanna and women of Mesopotamia ca. 3400-2000 B.C."
- Access a lecture by the curator of the Morgan exhibit, Sidney Babcock
- Explore more resources from the Morgan exhibit "She Who Wrote"
- Discover Seshat through a World History Encyclopedia entry
- Find out more about Seshat from a non-academic source
Enhance your understanding of early instruments and songs with these resources:
- Watch a short video on how scholars reconstructed the earliest known song, featuring a haunting version of a hymn-to-the-goddess at 3:16
- Read an article on the musical instruments of Ur
- Enjoy a performance on a replica of the silver lyre of Ur
- Learn about the sounds of Egyptian percussion instruments in a lesson, including a hand drum similar to what Miriam and the women of Israel may have played at 1:53