|
Showing 1 - 7 of
7 matches in All Departments
This interdisciplinary volume explains the phenomenon of
nationalism in nineteenth-century Europe through the prism of
Graeco-Roman antiquity. Through a series of case studies covering a
broad range of source material, it demonstrates the different
purposes the heritage of the classical world was put to during a
turbulent period in European history. Contributors include
classicists, historians, archaeologists, art historians and others.
In the Graeco-Roman world, the cosmic order was enacted, in part,
through bodies. The evaluative divisions between, for example,
women and men, humans and animals, "barbarians" and "civilized"
people, slaves and free citizens, or mortals and immortals, could
all be played out across the terrain of somatic difference,
embedded as it was within wider social and cultural matrices. This
volume explores these thematics of bodies and boundaries: to
examine the ways in which bodies, lived and imagined, were
implicated in issues of cosmic order and social organisation in
classical antiquity. It focuses on the body in performance
(especially in a rhetorical context), the erotic body, the dressed
body, pagan and Christian bodies as well as divine bodies and
animal bodies. The articles draw on a range of evidence and
approaches, cover a broad chronological and geographical span, and
explore the ways bodies can transgress and dissolve, as well shore
up, or even create, boundaries and hierarchies. This volume shows
that boundaries are constantly negotiated, shifted and refigured
through the practices and potentialities of embodiment.
The seventeen contributions to this volume, written by leading
experts, show that animals and humans in Graeco-Roman antiquity are
interconnected on a variety of different levels and that their
encounters and interactions often result from their belonging to
the same structures, 'networks' and communities or at least from
finding themselves together in a certain setting, context or
environment - wittingly or unwittingly. Papers explore the concrete
categories of interaction between animals and humans that can be
identified, in what contexts they occur, and what types of evidence
can be productively used to examine the concept of interactions.
Articles in this volume take into account literary, visual, and
other types of evidence. A comprehensive research bibliography is
also provided.
This volume presents a wide range of contributions that analyse the
cultural, sociological and communicative significance of tears and
crying in Graeco-Roman antiquity. The papers cover the time from
the eighth century BCE until late antiquity and take into account a
broad variety of literary genres such as epic, tragedy,
historiography, elegy, philosophical texts, epigram and the novel.
The collection also contains two papers from modern
socio-psychology.
The writing of letters often evokes associations of a single author
and a single addressee, who share in the exchange of intimate
thoughts across distances of space and time. This model underwrites
such iconic notions as the letter representing an 'image of the
soul of the author' or constituting 'one half of a dialogue'.
However justified this conception of letter-writing may be in
particular instances, it tends to marginalize a range of issues
that were central to epistolary communication in the ancient world
and have yet to receive sustained and systematic investigation. In
particular, it overlooks the fact that letters frequently
presuppose and were designed to reinforce communities-or, indeed,
to constitute them in the first place. This volume explores the
interrelation of letters and communities in the ancient world,
examining how epistolary communication aided in the construction
and cultivation of group-identities and communities, whether
social, political, religious, ethnic, or philosophical. A
theoretically informed Introduction establishes the interface of
epistolary discourse and group formation as a vital but hitherto
neglected area of research, and is followed by thirteen case
studies offering multi-disciplinary perspectives from four key
cultural configurations: Greece, Rome, Judaism, and Christianity.
The first part opens the volume with two chapters on the theory and
practice of epistolary communication that focus on ancient
epistolary theory and the unavoidable presence of a letter-carrier
who introduces a communal aspect into any correspondence, while the
second comprises five chapters that explore configurations of power
and epistolary communication in the Greek and Roman worlds, from
the archaic period to the end of the Hellenistic age. Five chapters
on letters and communities in Ancient Judaism and Early
Christianity follow in the third, part before the volume concludes
with an envoi examining the trans-historical, or indeed timeless,
philosophical community Seneca the Younger construes in his Letters
to Lucilius.
|
You may like...
Fast X
Vin Diesel, Jason Momoa, …
DVD
R172
R132
Discovery Miles 1 320
|