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El. knyga: Art/ifacts and ArtWorks in the Ancient World

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  • Formatas: 568 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 13-Aug-2021
  • Leidėjas: University Museum Publications
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781949057126
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: 568 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 13-Aug-2021
  • Leidėjas: University Museum Publications
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781949057126
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"This volume assembles leading Near Eastern art historians, archaeologists, and philologists to examine and apply critical contemporary approaches to the arts and artifacts of the ancient Near East. The contributions in the volume, which include a comprehensive first chapter by the editor and twelve paired chapters (each of which explores a key theme of the volume through a specific case study), are divided into six sections: Representation, Context, Complexity, Materiality, Space, and Time / Afterlives.A number of sub-themes and questions also thread through the volume as a whole: how might art historical, archaeological, anthropological, and philological approaches to the Near East complement and inform each other? How do word and image relate? And how might the field of Near Eastern studies not only adapt and apply approaches developed in other fields but also contribute to critical contemporary discourses? The volume is unified both by the themes that thread through it and by the comprehensive firstchapter in the volume, which explores the status of Near Eastern arts and artifacts as simultaneously non-Western and ancient and as neither of these, and which provides a larger theoretical framework for issues addressed in the volume as a whole"--

This volume assembles leading Near Eastern art historians, archaeologists, and philologists to examine and apply critical contemporary approaches to the arts and artifacts of the ancient Near East.

The contributions in the volume, which include a comprehensive first chapter by the editor and twelve paired chapters (each of which explores a key theme of the volume through a specific case study), are divided into six sections: Representation, Context, Complexity, Materiality, Space, and Time | Afterlives. A number of sub-themes and questions also thread through the volume as a whole: how might art historical, archaeological, anthropological, and philological approaches to the Near East complement and inform each other? How do word and image relate? And how might the field of Near Eastern studies not only adapt and apply approaches developed in other fields but also contribute to critical contemporary discourses? The volume is unified both by the themes that thread through it and by the comprehensive first chapter in the volume, which explores the status of Near Eastern arts and artifacts as simultaneously non-Western and ancient and as neither of these, and which provides a larger theoretical framework for issues addressed in the volume as a whole.

Contributor Biographies v
Acknowledgments xii
List of Figures
xv
Editorial Note xx
Dedication xxi
Foreword xxiii
Christopher P. Thornton
Introduction xxix
I Art | Artifact
1 Art/ifacts and ArtWorks: De-Colonizing the Study and Museum Display of Ancient and Non-Western Things
1(82)
Karen Sonik
II Representation
2 Beyond Representation: The Role of Affect in Sumerian Lamenting
83(32)
Paul Delnero
3 Seeing and Knowing: Cultural Concepts and the Deictic Power of the Image in Mesopotamia
115(24)
Beate Pongratz-Leisten
III Context
4 The Context(ualization) of Art in Non-Literate Societies: Armenian Middle Bronze Age Images and Animal Bones
139(20)
Karen S. Rubinson
5 To Be or Not to Be (Divine): The Achaemenid King and Essential Ambiguity in Image, Text, and Historical Context
159(24)
Matt Waters
IV Complexity
6 Glyptic Images as Reflecting Social Order: Changes in Seal Iconographies from Egalitarian to Early Centralized Societies in Greater Mesopotamia
183(28)
Marcella Frangipane
7 Sealing Practices at Tal-e Bakun A: Revisiting Concepts of Social Organization and Economic Control
211(32)
Barbara Heluuing
V Materiality
8 Ephemeral Artifacts: Warlock and Witch Figurines in Mesopotamian Anti-Witchcraft Rituals
243(22)
Greta Van Buylaere
9 What Lay Beneath: Queen Puabi's Garments and Her Passage to the Underworld
265(26)
Rita Wright
VI Space
10 Assyrian Spaces: Surface and Wall as Constitutive Features in Neo-Assyrian Narrative Reliefs
291(32)
Marian H. Feldman
11 The Assyrian Propaganda Machine in Text and Image: The Case of Sennacherib at Tyre in 701 BCE
323(44)
Joshua Jeffers
VII Time | Afterlives
12 The News from the East: Assyrian Archaeology, International Politics, and the British Press in the Victorian Age
367(48)
Dauid Kertai
13 Assyrian Style and Victorian Materiality: Mesopotamia in British Souvenirs, Political Caricatures, Theatrical Productions, and the Sydenham Crystal Palace
415
Keuin M. McGeough
Karen Sonik is Associate Professor in the Department of Art and Art History, Auburn University.