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The fourteen essays in this collection demonstrate a wide variety
of approaches to the study of Byzantine architecture and its
decoration, a reflection of both newer trends and traditional
scholarship in the field. The variety is also a reflection of
Professor Curcic's wide interests, which he shares with his
students. These include the analysis of recent archaeological
discoveries; recovery of lost monuments through archival research
and onsite examination of material remains; reconsidering
traditional typological approaches often ignored in current
scholarship; fresh interpretations of architectural features and
designs; contextualization of monuments within the landscape;
tracing historiographic trends; and mining neglected written
sources for motives of patronage. The papers also range broadly in
terms of chronology and geography, from the Early Christian through
the post-Byzantine period and from Italy to Armenia. Three papers
examine Early Christian monuments, and of these two expand the
inquiry into their architectural afterlives. Others discuss later
monuments in Byzantine territory and monuments in territories
related to Byzantium such as Serbia, Armenia, and Norman Italy. No
Orthodox church being complete without interior decoration, two
papers discuss issues connected to frescoes in late medieval Balkan
churches. Finally, one study investigates the continued influence
of Byzantine palace architecture long after the fall of
Constantinople.
The fourteen essays in this collection demonstrate a wide variety
of approaches to the study of Byzantine architecture and its
decoration, a reflection of both newer trends and traditional
scholarship in the field. The variety is also a reflection of
Professor Curcic's wide interests, which he shares with his
students. These include the analysis of recent archaeological
discoveries; recovery of lost monuments through archival research
and onsite examination of material remains; reconsidering
traditional typological approaches often ignored in current
scholarship; fresh interpretations of architectural features and
designs; contextualization of monuments within the landscape;
tracing historiographic trends; and mining neglected written
sources for motives of patronage. The papers also range broadly in
terms of chronology and geography, from the Early Christian through
the post-Byzantine period and from Italy to Armenia. Three papers
examine Early Christian monuments, and of these two expand the
inquiry into their architectural afterlives. Others discuss later
monuments in Byzantine territory and monuments in territories
related to Byzantium such as Serbia, Armenia, and Norman Italy. No
Orthodox church being complete without interior decoration, two
papers discuss issues connected to frescoes in late medieval Balkan
churches. Finally, one study investigates the continued influence
of Byzantine palace architecture long after the fall of
Constantinople.
This volume explores the ways local communities perceive,
experience, and interact with archaeological sites in Greece, as
well as with the archaeologists and government officials who
construct and study such places. In so doing, it reveals another
side to sites that have been revered as both birthplace of Western
civilization and basis of the modern Greek nation. The conceptual
terrain of those who live near such sites is complex and furrowed
with ambivalence, confusion, and resentment. For many local
residents, these sites are gated enclaves, unexplained and off
limits, except when workers are needed. While cleavages between
residents and archaeologists have received attention elsewhere,
they have been little examined in Greece, where they are often
masked by sweeping statements on the glory of antiquity that
overlook the extent to which ordinary Greeks have become
disconnected from these places in their midst. The complexity of
this situation, freighted as it is with two centuries of
archaeological practice, is explored in this volume from multiple
viewpoints and with respect to sites from prehistoric to Ottoman
and beyond. Several chapters trace the origins of the disconnection
between archaeological sites and communities, relating it to the
ways in which early travelers appropriated sites for their own
purposes, the subsequent move of archaeology onto the slippery
slope created by the travelers, and the concurrent depiction of
Greek peasants as passive and uninformed. Other chapters chronicle
the active ways in which communities have contested the development
and representation of particular sites and even sometimes created
alternative landscapes with other points of entry to the valued
Greek past. Still others recount and assess recent archaeological
efforts to reconnect residents to the sites in their midst.
Archaeology in Situ will be of particular value to those interested
in modern Greek studies, Greek archaeology, Classics, public
archaeology, archaeological ethics, anthropology, cultur
This volume explores the ways local communities perceive,
experience, and interact with archaeological sites in Greece, as
well as with the archaeologists and government officials who
construct and study such places. In so doing, it reveals another
side to sites that have been revered as both birthplace of Western
civilization and basis of the modern Greek nation. The conceptual
terrain of those who live near such sites is complex and furrowed
with ambivalence, confusion, and resentment. For many local
residents, these sites are gated enclaves, unexplained and off
limits, except when workers are needed.
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