Ancient Rome as a Museum: Power, Identity, and the Culture of CollectingOUP Oxford, 26 באפר׳ 2012 - 395 עמודים In antiquity, Rome represented one of the world's great cultural capitals. The city constituted a collective repository for various commemoratives, cultural artefacts, and curiosities, not to mention plunder taken in war, and over its history became what we might call a 'museum city'. Ancient Rome as a Museum considers how cultural objects and memorabilia both from Rome and its empire came to reflect a specific Roman identity and, in some instances, to even construct or challenge Roman perceptions of power and of the self. In this volume, Rutledge argues that Roman cultural values and identity are indicated in part by what sort of materials Romans deemed worthy of display and how they chose to display, view, and preserve them. Grounded in the growing field of museum studies, this book includes a discussion on private acquisition of cultural property and asks how well the Roman community at large understood the meaning and history behind various objects and memorabilia. Of particular importance was the use of collections by a number of emperors in the further establishment of their legitimacy and authority. Through an examination of specific cultural objects, Rutledge questions how they came to reflect or even perpetuate Roman values and identity. |
תוכן
Museums and Muses | 1 |
2 Collecting and Acquisition | 31 |
3 Viewing Appreciating Understanding | 79 |
Spoils War Commemoratives and Competition | 123 |
Pietas Women and the Roman House | 159 |
6 The Monster and the Map | 193 |
7 Imperial Collections and the Narrative of the Princeps | 221 |
8 Access and Upkeep | 287 |
9 Epilogue | 311 |
Bibliography | 315 |
Index Locorum | 339 |
359 | |
מהדורות אחרות - הצג הכל
Ancient Rome as a Museum: Power, Identity, and the Culture of Collecting <span dir=ltr>Steven Rutledge</span> אין תצוגה מקדימה זמינה - 2012 |
מונחים וביטויים נפוצים
adorned aediles Aemilius Aeneas Ancient Rome antiquity Art as Plunder artistic Augustus bronze Caesar Cambridge 1996 Cambridge Mass Capitoline Cass Cicero collection commemoration concerning conquest construction context cult cultural artefacts cultural objects cultural property Culture and Identity dedicated depicted discussion display divine Domitian elite Elsner emperor Empire famous Forum Forum of Augustus Galinsky Greek Gruen Hercules History Holliday images imperial Jupiter Livy London LTUR Lysippus Marcellus material memory monuments narrative nature Nero Noreña notes Östenberg Oxford painting Palatine Pausanias Philostratus Photo Pliny the Elder Pliny's Plut Plutarch political Pompey portico Praxiteles Procopius reflected republic restoration Roman Art Roman Culture Roman Museums Roman Society Roman Triumph Roman Viewer Rome’s Romulus sacred Satyricon sculpture social Sperlonga spoils Staging the World statuary Strabo Suet Tacitus Tiberius tradition triumph triumphal Venus Verres Vespasian victory virtue visual Wallace-Hadrill