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In this book, Brenda Longfellow examines one of the features of
Roman Imperial cities, the monumental civic fountain. Built in
cities throughout the Roman Empire during the first through third
centuries AD, these fountains were imposing in size, frequently
adorned with grand sculptures, and often placed in highly
trafficked areas. Over twenty-five of these urban complexes can be
associated with emperors. Dr Longfellow situates each of these
examples within its urban environment and investigates the edifice
as a product of an individual patron and a particular historical
and geographical context. She also considers the role of civic
patronage in fostering a dialogue between imperial and provincial
elites with the local urban environment. Tracing the development of
the genre across the empire, she illuminates the motives and
ideologies of imperial and local benefactors in Rome and the
provinces and explores the complex interplay of imperial power,
patronage, and the local urban environment.
In this book, Brenda Longfellow examines one of the features of
Roman Imperial cities, the monumental civic fountain. Built in
cities throughout the Roman Empire during the first through third
centuries AD, these fountains were imposing in size, frequently
adorned with grand sculptures, and often placed in highly
trafficked areas. Over twenty-five of these urban complexes can be
associated with emperors. Dr. Longfellow situates each of these
examples within its urban environment and investigates the edifice
as a product of an individual patron and a particular historical
and geographical context. She also considers the role of civic
patronage in fostering a dialogue between imperial and provincial
elites with the local urban environment. Tracing the development of
the genre across the empire, she illuminates the motives and
ideologies of imperial and local benefactors in Rome and the
provinces and explores the complex interplay of imperial power,
patronage, and the local urban environment.
In recent decades, the study of Roman art has shifted focus
dramatically from issues of connoisseurship, typology, and
chronology to analyses of objects within their contemporary
contexts and local environments. Scholars challenge the notion,
formerly taken for granted, that extant historical texts—the
writings of Vitruvius, for example—can directly inform the study
of architectural remains. Roman-era statues, paintings, and mosaics
are no longer dismissed as perfunctory replicas of lost Greek
or Hellenistic originals; they are worthy of study in their
own right. Further, the scope of what constitutes Roman art has
expanded to include the vast spectrum of objects used in civic,
religious, funerary, and domestic contexts and from communities
across the Roman Empire. The work gathered in Roman Artists,
Patrons, and Public Consumption displays the breadth and
depth of scholarship in the field made possible by these
fundamental changes. The first five essays approach individual
objects and artistic tropes, as well as their cultural contexts and
functions, from fresh and dynamic angles. The latter essays focus
on case studies in Pompeii, demonstrating how close visual analysis
firmly rooted in local and temporal contexts not only strengthens
understanding of ancient interactions with monuments but also
sparks a reconsideration of long-held assumptions reinforced by
earlier scholarship. These rigorous essays reflect and honor the
groundbreaking scholarship of Elaine K. Gazda. In addition to
volume editors Brenda Longfellow and Ellen E. Perry, contributors
include Bettina Bergmann, Elise Friedland, Barbara Kellum, Diana Y.
Ng, Jessica Powers, Melanie Grunow Sobocinski, Lea M. Stirling,
Molly Swetnam-Burland, Elizabeth Wolfram Thill, and Jennifer
Trimble.
Since Nell Shipman wrote and starred in Back to God's Country
(1919), Canadian women have been making films. The accolades given
to film-makers such as Patricia Rozema (I've Heard the Mermaids
Singing, When Night is Falling), Alanis Obomsawin (My Name Is
Kahenttiiosta, Walker), and Micheline Lanctot (Deux Actrices) at
festivals throughout the world in recent years attest to the
growing international recognition for films made by Canadian women.
With Gendering the Nation the editors have produced a definitive
collection of essays, both original and previously published, that
address the impact and influence of a century of women's
film-making in Canada. In dialogue with new paradigms for
understanding the relationship of cinema with nation and gender,
Gendering the Nation seeks to situate women's cinema through the
complex optic of national culture. This collection of critical
essays employs a variety of frameworks to analyse cinematic
practices that range from narrative to documentary to the avant
garde.
Literary evidence is often silent about the lives of women in
antiquity, particularly those from the buried cities of Pompeii and
Herculaneum. Even when women are considered, they are often seen
through the lens of their male counterparts. In this collection,
Brenda Longfellow and Molly Swetnam-Burland have gathered an
outstanding group of scholars to give voice to both the elite and
ordinary women living on the Bay of Naples before the eruption of
Vesuvius. Using visual, architectural, archaeological, and
epigraphic evidence, the authors consider how women in the region
interacted with their communities through family relationships,
businesses, and religious practices, in ways that could complement
or complicate their primary social roles as mothers, daughters, and
wives. They explore women-run businesses from weaving and
innkeeping to prostitution, consider representations of women in
portraits and graffiti, and examine how women expressed their
identities in the funerary realm. Providing a new model for
studying women in the ancient world, Women's Lives, Women's Voices
brings to light the day-to-day activities of women of all classes
in Pompeii and Herculaneum.
Whether addressing HIV/AIDS, the policing of bathroom sex,
censorship, or anti-globalization movements, John Greyson has
imbued his work with cutting humour, eroticism, and postmodern
aesthetics. Mashing up high art, opera, community activism, and pop
culture, Greyson challenges his audience to consider new ways that
images can intervene in both political and public spheres. Emerging
on the Toronto scene in the late 1970s, Greyson has produced an
eclectic, provocative, and award-winning body of work in film and
video. The essays in The Perils of Pedagogy range from personal
meditations to provocative textual readings to studies of the
historical contexts in which the artist's works intervened
politically as well as artistically. Notable writers from a range
of disciplines as well as prominent experimental and activist
filmmakers tackle questions of documentary ethics, moving image
activism, and queer coalitional politics raised by Greyson's work.
Close to one hundred frame captures and stills from almost sixty
works, along with articles, speeches, and short scripts by Greyson
- several never before published - supplement the collection.
Celebrating thirty years of passionate, brilliant, and affecting
moviemaking, The Perils of Pedagogy will fascinate both specialists
and general readers interested in media activism and advocacy,
censorship, and freedom of expression.
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