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Debating Orientalization: Multidisciplinary Approaches to Processes of Change in the Ancient Mediterranean: Monographs in Mediterranean Archaeology, cartea 10

Autor Corrina Riva Editat de Corinna Riva, Nicholas C. Vella
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 30 apr 2005
Brings together papers presented at a symposium held in Oxford in 2002 to debate the theme of ancient Orientalization. This volume reassesses the concept of Orientalizing, questioning whether it is valid to interpret Mediterranean-wide processes of change in the Late Bronze and Early Iron Ages by the term Orientalization.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781845531928
ISBN-10: 1845531922
Pagini: 224
Dimensiuni: 173 x 246 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.5 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Equinox Publishing (Indonesia)
Seriile Monographs in Mediterranean Archaeology S., Monographs in Mediterranean Archaeology


Notă biografică

Corinna Riva is Lecturer in Mediterranean Archaeology at University College London. Her research interests cover Iron Age Italy and the 1st millennium BC in the Central Mediterranean. Since 2002, she has been co-director of the Upper Esino Valley Survey (Marche, Italy). She has published articles on Etruria, Adriatic central Italy and co-edited (with G. Bradley and E. Isayev) Ancient Italy: Regions without Boundaries (Exeter University Press, 2008). Her own book The Urbanization of Etruria (Cambridge University Press) was published in 2010. Nicholas C. Vella is Senior Lecturer in Department of Classics and Archaeology at the University of Malta. His current research interests focus on the study of connectivity in the central Mediterranean at the end of the 2nd millennium BC, and on the development of archaeological traditions in the Mediterranean in the inter-war period. He co-directs two excavation projects in Malta and is co-director of the Belgo-Maltese Malta Survey Project. He is the co-editor (with Josephine Crawley Quinn) of Identifying the Punic Mediterranean (British School at Rome, forthcoming).

Cuprins

Contributors: Maria Eugenia Aubet, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona, Peter van Dommelen, Universitat de Valencia, Eric Gubel, Musees Royaux d'Art et d'Histoire de Bruxelles, A. Bernard Knapp, University of Glasgow, Sarah P. Morris, UCLA, Robin Osborne, Cambridge University, Nicholas Purcell, Oxford University, David, Wengrow, Institute of Archaeology, University of London.

Recenzii

'I highly recommend essays by Purcell, Wengrow, and Osborne, especially for those concerned with issues of cultural transformation and exchange. I also enjoyed the essays of Morris and van Dommelen. Gubel's essay caused me to reflect on how the cultures of Canaan/Israel might have contributed to and been shaped by these processes of Mediterranean interconnectivity and what impact that might have had on the religious world/s that subsequently produced the biblical and para-biblical texts.' Michael Carden, University of Queensland, The Bible and Critical Theory, Volume 4, Number 2, 2008