|
Showing 1 - 5 of
5 matches in All Departments
Livy's Women explores the profound questions arising from the
presence of women of influence and power in the socio-political
canvas of one of the most important histories of Rome and the Roman
people, Ab Urbe Condita (From the Foundation of the City). This
theoretically informed study of Livy's monumental narrative charts
the fascinating links between episodes containing references to
women in prominent roles and the historian's treatment of Rome's
evolutionary foundation story. Explicitly gendered in relation to
the socio-cultural contexts informing the narrative, the author's
background, the literary landscape of Livy's Rome, and the
subsequent historiographical commentary, this volume offers a
comprehensive, coherent and contextualised overview of all episodes
in Ab Urbe Condita relating to women as agents of historical
change. As well as proving invaluable insights into socio-cultural
history for Classicists, Livy's Women will also be of interest to
instructors, researchers, and students of female representation in
history in general.
Ancient graffiti - hundreds of thousands of informal, ephemeral
texts spanning millennia - offer a patchwork of fragmentary
conversations in a variety of languages spread across the
Mediterranean world. Cut, painted, inked or traced in charcoal, the
surviving graffiti present a layer of lived experience in the
ancient world unavailable from other sources. Graffiti in Antiquity
reveals how and why the inhabitants of Greece and Rome - men and
women and free and enslaved - formulated written and visual
messages about themselves and the world around them as graffiti.
The sources - drawn from 800 BCE to 600 CE - are examined both
within their individual historical, cultural and archaeological
contexts and thematically, allowing for an exploration of social
identity in the urban society of the ancient world. An analysis of
one of the most lively and engaged forms of personal communication
and protest, Graffiti in Antiquity introduces a new way of reading
sociocultural relationships among ordinary people living in the
ancient world.
Ancient graffiti - hundreds of thousands of informal, ephemeral
texts spanning millennia - offer a patchwork of fragmentary
conversations in a variety of languages spread across the
Mediterranean world. Cut, painted, inked or traced in charcoal, the
surviving graffiti present a layer of lived experience in the
ancient world unavailable from other sources. "Graffiti in
Antiquity" reveals how and why the inhabitants of Greece and Rome -
men and women and free and enslaved - formulated written and visual
messages about themselves and the world around them as graffiti.
The sources - drawn from 800 BCE to 600 CE - are examined both
within their individual historical, cultural and archaeological
contexts and thematically, allowing for an exploration of social
identity in the urban society of the ancient world. An analysis of
one of the most lively and engaged forms of personal communication
and protest, "Graffiti in Antiquity "introduces a new way of
reading sociocultural relationships among ordinary people living in
the ancient world.
This volume explores the creation of 'written spaces' through the
accretion of monumental inscriptions and non-official graffiti in
the Latin-speaking West between c.200 BC and AD 300. The shift to
an epigraphic culture demonstrates new mentalities regarding the
use of language, the relationship between local elites and the
population, and between local elites and the imperial power. The
creation of both official and non-official inscriptions is one of
the most recognisable facets of the Roman city. The chapters of
this book consider why urban populations created these written
spaces and how these spaces in turn affected those urban
civilisations. They also examine how these inscriptions interacted
to create written spaces that could inculcate a sense of
'Roman-ness' into urban populations whilst also acting as a means
of differentiating communities from each other. The volume includes
new approaches to the study of political entities, social
institutions, graffiti and painting, and the differing trajectories
of written spaces in the cities of Roman Africa, Italy, Spain and
Gaul.
|
|