Word and Image in Ancient GreeceN. K. Rutter, Brian A. Sparkes Edinburgh University Press, 2000 - 258 עמודים In ancient Greek society communication was largely oral and visual. The epic poets sang and recited the legends that served the Greeks as their historical past; lyric and elegiac poets sang songs of love and death and celebrated military and sporting success to the accompaniment of the lyre and pipes; the art of rhetoric was a vital ingredient in speeches in the assembly and the law courts; in tragedies and comedies actors spoke to audiences of thousands. Of equal importance to the Greeks were the images with which they were always surrounded - civic and religious monuments, statuary, architectural decoration, and the scenes of myth, fantasy and everyday life with which their vases and vessels were painted and decorated.This volume of new work by leading scholars explores the ways in which these two central aspects of Greek culture interact, and throws new light on their many and related functions. The subjects include the creation of the Greek myths during the early centuries of the first millennium BC when the technique of writing had been lost; the significance of words and images on painted pottery; the relationship between drama on stage and the illustration of the same stories on pottery; and the ways in which stories portrayed in monumental sculpture on temples were understood by the people who came to look at them. Classical Greece produced the beginnings of the tradition of philosophical reflection on the nature and value of images, notably in the work of Plato and Aristotle: the concept of mimesis, concerned with questions both of representation and expression, is directly addressed by several of the authors, and forms an underlying theme of the volume as a whole.The authors are drawn from the historical, archaeological, literary, philosophical and art historical fields of classical study. The book, which contains 50 illustrations, makes a coherent and important contribution to a subject of great current interest to classicists of all disciplines. |
מתוך הספר
תוצאות 1-3 מתוך 92
עמוד 103
... painting ( and I shall sometimes use painting , as Plato himself does , as a synecdoche for the figurative arts as a whole ) are philosophically more far - reaching than Aristotle's , precisely because they become much more entangled ...
... painting ( and I shall sometimes use painting , as Plato himself does , as a synecdoche for the figurative arts as a whole ) are philosophically more far - reaching than Aristotle's , precisely because they become much more entangled ...
עמוד 110
... painting we still have access to , vase - painting . But the idea of trompe l'oeil , with the requirement of distance viewing at 598c3 , establishes a reference to the major but largely lost forms of wall- and panel - painting , in ...
... painting we still have access to , vase - painting . But the idea of trompe l'oeil , with the requirement of distance viewing at 598c3 , establishes a reference to the major but largely lost forms of wall- and panel - painting , in ...
עמוד 113
... painting as such . But that need and should not prevent us from identifying the kind of direction in which we would have to move in order to satisfy the challenge implied by his discussion of painting . We can do that precisely because ...
... painting as such . But that need and should not prevent us from identifying the kind of direction in which we would have to move in order to satisfy the challenge implied by his discussion of painting . We can do that precisely because ...
תוכן
the lack of images in early Greece | 11 |
The uses of writing on early Greek painted pottery | 22 |
Tools of the trade | 35 |
זכויות יוצרים | |
10 קטעים אחרים שאינם מוצגים
מהדורות אחרות - הצג הכל
Word and Image in Ancient Greece <span dir=ltr>N. K. Rutter</span>,<span dir=ltr>Brian A. Sparkes</span> אין תצוגה מקדימה זמינה - 2000 |
מונחים וביטויים נפוצים
Aeschylus aesthetic amphora Ancient Greek appears archaic artistic Athenian Athens Attic red-figure base battle Beazley Boardman bronze burial Cambridge University Press Carpenter 1989 cemetery Centaur century BC citizens Clarendon Press classical context cranes cultural Dasen dead decoration Delivorrias depicted discussion Doryphoros dramatic east pediment eidôla eidôlon Erichthonios Euripides evaluation example Exekias figures fourth century fragments frieze funerary gaze ghost Goldhill Greece Greek Art Helen Hephaisteion Hephaistos Herakles Hesiod Homer hydria iconography images inscriptions kylix Lefkandi lekythos Lemos LIMC London Medea metopes mimesis mimetic monuments Museum myth narrative Nekuia Nemesis neo-Attic nightingale Odysseus Olympia Oxford Painter painting Palagia Parthenos Patroclus Pausanias pediment Petrakos Pheidias Philomela Plato political Polykleitos Popham pottery Procne Protogeometric pygmies pygmy-and-crane red-figure relief representation Rhamnous rôle scene sculpture Shapiro sixth century Snodgrass Socrates Sophocles spectator statue statue-base story suggests symposion temple Tereus theatre tragedy vase vase-painting viewer word Zeus καὶ