Reading “Law, Rhetoric, and Gender in Ramesside Egypt” by
Deborah Sweeney, I was originally intrigued by the similarities I saw between
the rhetoric Egyptians used in legal proceedings and the rhetoric seen today in
legal proceedings. I am drawing on my very limited knowledge of how legal
proceedings actually work in the U.S., so my insight is pretty basic, but we
see the use of witnesses, fines and oaths, documents as evidence, rhetorical
questions, denying knowledge and exceptions to arguments. We see these things
in general everyday disputes. This demonstrates the common devices that seem to
be instinctual to humans, across culture and time.
There were various elements that differed from what we see
today that I found very interesting. For example, Sweeney offers an example of
a woman calling a witness in order to actually accuse her. This seems
counterproductive, but rhetorically that may function to help the suspect.
Possibly if she was willing to call on someone to “accuse” her she was actually
so confident in her innocence that this was simply a rhetorical way of saying
that no one else would accuse her.
While discussing the role of women, Sweeney also brings up
another important consideration on page 106: “Since these elements are rare in
any case, and since fewer utterances by women have been recorded, this
distribution may simply reflect the inadequacy of our sources, rather than a
genuine gender difference.” Our understanding of ancient rhetoric relies so
heavily on evidence I cannot help but wonder how good our view into these
things actually is if we have no way of knowing how good our evidence actually
is. We might have a fairly large collection of texts, but what if some
something happened and an entire sector of evidence was somehow destroyed? Much
of this evidence can stand alone, but gaining an overall, fully developed view
of the bigger picture is obviously difficult. How are we to even know if we
have a good sample of texts?
This text also answered some of the questions I had after
reading Lipson’s piece on Egyptian rhetoric. I was curious as to how literacy
and rhetoric functioned in the lower ends of society, and this this piece
points out that only elite males and scribes were trained in rhetoric. This
also points out that women that were part of these higher classes may have been
exposed to this training at home, but there is no evidence if they were
actually taught. This relates to the possible lack of evidence about women that
Sweeney brings up. It makes sense to me that because there were fewer women who
were involved we have less evidence about them.
I actually brought up the problem of evidence (either overwhelming text or not enough) in class a few weeks ago. As we have seen throughout this collection of essays, both forms (overwhelming or not enough) have plagued the rhetoricians in their attempt to display their work through writing. Personally, I take my hat off to any rhetorician that studies ancient texts, and I especially commend Sweeney for attempting to add a new body of knowledge and thinking in an area that offers little evidence of actual female rhetoric.
ReplyDeleteWe may then ask the question: Why even bother than? I see Sweeney’s essay as a statement to the field of rhetorics. I think she is saying that studying the voiceless and the censored (even though the evidence is lacking and hard to find) gives a voice where it is normally suppressed. We could learn from this practice in our everyday life, but as rhetoricians we should be asking one question: Who are we giving a voice to today?