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What are we doing when we walk into an archaeological museum or onto an archaeological site? What do the objects and features we encounter in these unique places mean and, more specifically, how do they convey to us something about the beliefs and activities of formerly living humans? In short, how do visible remains and ruins in the present give meaning to the human past? Karen Bassi addresses these questions through detailed close readings of canonical works spanning the archaic to the classical periods of ancient Greek culture, showing how the past is constituted in descriptions of what narrators and characters see in their present context. She introduces the term protoarchaeological to refer to narratives that navigate the gap between linguistic representation and empirical observationbetween words and thingsin accessing and giving meaning to the past. Such narratives invite readers to view the past as a receding visual field and, in the process, to cross the disciplinary boundaries that divide literature, history, and archaeology. Aimed at classicists, literary scholars, ancient historians, cultural historians, and archaeological theorists, the book combines three areas of research: time as a feature of narrative structure in literary theory; the concept of the past itself in the philosophy of history; and the ontological status of material objects in archaeological theory. Each of five central chapters explores how specific protoarchaeological narrativesfrom the fate of Zeus stone in Hesiods Theogony to the contest between words and objects in Aristophanes Frogsboth expose and attempt to bridge this gap. Throughout, the book serves as a response to Herodotus task in writing the Histories, namely, to ensure that the past deeds of men do not fade with time.
- Format: Inbunden
- ISBN: 9780472119929
- Språk: Engelska
- Antal sidor: 256
- Utgivningsdatum: 2016-08-17
- Förlag: The University of Michigan Press