Senses of the Empire: Multisensory Approaches to Roman Culture
Editat de Eleanor Bettsen Limba Engleză Hardback – 6 mar 2017
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781472446299
ISBN-10: 1472446291
Pagini: 248
Ilustrații: 25
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 19 mm
Greutate: 0.48 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1472446291
Pagini: 248
Ilustrații: 25
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 19 mm
Greutate: 0.48 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Public țintă
PostgraduateCuprins
Introduction: Senses of Empire
Eleanor Betts
Chapter 1 The Sounds of the City: from Noise to Silence in Ancient Rome
Ray Laurence
Chapter 2 The Multivalency of Sensory Artefacts in the City of Rome
Eleanor Betts
Chapter 3 Beyond Smell: the Sensory Landscape of the Roman fullonica
Miko Flohr
Chapter 4 Soundscape of the Street: Architectural Acoustics in Ostia
Jeffrey Veitch
Chapter 5 Sensory Archaeologies: a Vindolanda Smellscape
Thomas J. Derrick
Chapter 6 A Sense of Grief: the Role of the Senses in the Performance of Roman Mourning
Valerie M. Hope
Chapter 7 Blood, Fire and Feasting: The Role of Touch and Taste in Graeco-Roman Animal Sacrifice
Candace Weddle
Chapter 8 Babes in Arms? Sensory Dissonance and the Ambiguities of Votive Objects
Emma-Jayne Graham
Chapter 9 All That Glitters: Roman Signet Rings, the Senses and the Self
Ian J. Marshman
Chapter 10 Tuning into the Past: Methodological Perspectives in the Contextualised Study of the Sounds of Roman Antiquity
Alexandre Vincent
Chapter 11 Motion Sensors: Perceiving Movement in Roman Pantomime
Helen Slaney
Chapter 12 Scents of Place and Colours of Smell: Fragranced Entertainment in Ancient Rome
Jo Day
Afterword: Towards a Methodology for Roman Sensory Studies
Eleanor Betts
Eleanor Betts
Chapter 1 The Sounds of the City: from Noise to Silence in Ancient Rome
Ray Laurence
Chapter 2 The Multivalency of Sensory Artefacts in the City of Rome
Eleanor Betts
Chapter 3 Beyond Smell: the Sensory Landscape of the Roman fullonica
Miko Flohr
Chapter 4 Soundscape of the Street: Architectural Acoustics in Ostia
Jeffrey Veitch
Chapter 5 Sensory Archaeologies: a Vindolanda Smellscape
Thomas J. Derrick
Chapter 6 A Sense of Grief: the Role of the Senses in the Performance of Roman Mourning
Valerie M. Hope
Chapter 7 Blood, Fire and Feasting: The Role of Touch and Taste in Graeco-Roman Animal Sacrifice
Candace Weddle
Chapter 8 Babes in Arms? Sensory Dissonance and the Ambiguities of Votive Objects
Emma-Jayne Graham
Chapter 9 All That Glitters: Roman Signet Rings, the Senses and the Self
Ian J. Marshman
Chapter 10 Tuning into the Past: Methodological Perspectives in the Contextualised Study of the Sounds of Roman Antiquity
Alexandre Vincent
Chapter 11 Motion Sensors: Perceiving Movement in Roman Pantomime
Helen Slaney
Chapter 12 Scents of Place and Colours of Smell: Fragranced Entertainment in Ancient Rome
Jo Day
Afterword: Towards a Methodology for Roman Sensory Studies
Eleanor Betts
Notă biografică
Eleanor Betts is Baron Thyssen Lecturer in Classical Studies at the Open University. Her research focuses on the multisensory interrelationships of the human body, material culture and archaeological landscapes. Her particular areas of interest are Roman urbanism and religion in Roman and Iron Age Italy (primarily Picenum, modern Marche), with an emphasis on concepts and use of space.
Recenzii
"...a stimulating contribution to a still relatively new question in the study of ancient life worlds, which has great potential for knowledge." - Ursula Quatember, Bryn Mawr Classical Review 2017
"This volume explicitly sets out to spark a debate about sensory studies and antiquity ... papers on different senses are deliberately interwoven rather than separated into sections on taste, touch, smell, etc ... Perhaps the best feature of the book is its encouragement to experiment with sensory methods and its positioning of itself as the beginning of a conversation rather than a definitive statement." - Britta Auger, The Classical Journal 2018
"This volume makes the Roman Empire seem both strange and exceptionally vivid... In Betts’ edited volume, the 12 essays put literary and archaeological evidence into effective dialogue. The volume’s great strength lies in the methodologies it sets forth for a broad range of evidence (signet rings, saffron, votive offerings, musical instruments), contexts (streets, cloth cleaners, forts), and events (funerals, sacrifices, pantomime, shopping). Scholars seeking models for their own multisensory analyses or enticing case studies for the classroom will find this book rewarding." - Kimberly Cassibry, American Journal of Archaeology
"Senses of the Empire is undoubtedly destined to become an essential work of reference in the new trend of Sense Studies in Ancient History." - Antón Alvar Nuño, The Journal of Roman Studies
"...a high-quality, lively and inventive collection of essays, which will do much to stimulate further study in this field... In this excellent collection, we can see many of the ways in which the senses served as the conduit through which the exercise of power could flow, and overall it succeeds in taking the study of the senses in antiquity to a new level of theoretical insight and detailed investigation." - Jerry Toner, The Classical Review
"This volume explicitly sets out to spark a debate about sensory studies and antiquity ... papers on different senses are deliberately interwoven rather than separated into sections on taste, touch, smell, etc ... Perhaps the best feature of the book is its encouragement to experiment with sensory methods and its positioning of itself as the beginning of a conversation rather than a definitive statement." - Britta Auger, The Classical Journal 2018
"This volume makes the Roman Empire seem both strange and exceptionally vivid... In Betts’ edited volume, the 12 essays put literary and archaeological evidence into effective dialogue. The volume’s great strength lies in the methodologies it sets forth for a broad range of evidence (signet rings, saffron, votive offerings, musical instruments), contexts (streets, cloth cleaners, forts), and events (funerals, sacrifices, pantomime, shopping). Scholars seeking models for their own multisensory analyses or enticing case studies for the classroom will find this book rewarding." - Kimberly Cassibry, American Journal of Archaeology
"Senses of the Empire is undoubtedly destined to become an essential work of reference in the new trend of Sense Studies in Ancient History." - Antón Alvar Nuño, The Journal of Roman Studies
"...a high-quality, lively and inventive collection of essays, which will do much to stimulate further study in this field... In this excellent collection, we can see many of the ways in which the senses served as the conduit through which the exercise of power could flow, and overall it succeeds in taking the study of the senses in antiquity to a new level of theoretical insight and detailed investigation." - Jerry Toner, The Classical Review
Descriere
Through a series of multisensory case studies centred on people, places, buildings and artefacts, and on specific aspects of human behaviour, this volume develops ground-breaking methods and approaches for sensory studies in Roman archaeology and ancient history. A multisensory approach is taken throughout, with each chapter exploring at least two of the senses of sight, hearing, smell, taste and touch. The contributors’ individual approaches vary, reflecting the possibilities and the wide application of sensory studies to the ancient world.