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El. knyga: Minoan Zoomorphic Culture: Between Bodies and Things

(The Johns Hopkins University, Maryland)
  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 06-Jun-2024
  • Leidėjas: Cambridge University Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781009452052
  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 06-Jun-2024
  • Leidėjas: Cambridge University Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781009452052

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"Minoan renderings of animals are some of the most vibrant art of the ancient Mediterranean. Working with current developments in material-culture studies, animal studies, and ancient art, Anderson examines these objects not as mere representations but as uniquely real embodiments of animals that made powerful contributions to sociocultural life"--

Minoan renderings of animals are some of the most vibrant art of the ancient Mediterranean. Working with current developments in material-culture studies, animal studies, and ancient art, Anderson examines these objects not as mere representations but as uniquely real embodiments of animals that made powerful contributions to sociocultural life.

Since the earliest era of archaeological discovery on Crete, vivid renderings of animals have been celebrated as defining elements of Minoan culture. Animals were crafted in a rich range of substances and media in the broad Minoan world, from tiny seal-stones to life-size frescoes. In this study, Emily Anderson fundamentally rethinks the status of these zoomorphic objects. Setting aside their traditional classification as 'representations' or signs, she recognizes them as distinctively real embodiments of animals in the world. These fabricated animals-engaged with in quiet tombs, bustling harbors, and monumental palatial halls-contributed in unique ways to Bronze Age Aegean sociocultural life and affected the status of animals within people's lived experience. Some gave new substance and contour to familiar biological species, while many exotic and fantastical beasts gained physical reality only in these fabricated embodiments. As real presences, the creatures that the Minoans crafted artfully toyed with expectation and realized new dimensions within and between animalian identities.

Daugiau informacijos

Examines renderings of animals from the Minoan world not as mere representations but as uniquely real embodiments of animals that made powerful contributions to sociocultural life.
1. Life among the animalian in bronze age Crete and the Southern Aegean;
2. Craftiness and productivity in bodily things: the changing contexts of Cretan zoomorphic vessels;
3. Stone poets: between lion and person in glyptic and oral culture of bronze age Crete and the Aegean;
4. Likeness and integration among extraordinary creatures: rethinking Minoan 'composite' beasts;
5. Singular, seriated, similar: helmets, shields and ikria as intuitive animalian things;
6. Moving toward life: painted walls and novel animalian presences in Aegean spaces; Concluding thoughts: restless bodies in the Minoan world.
Emily S. K. Anderson teaches in the Department of Classics at Johns Hopkins University, where her work focuses on the visual and material cultures of the Aegean Bronze Age and the ongoing lives of ancient forms and materials. She is the author of Seals, Craft, and Community in Bronze Age Crete (2016).