Dynamic Epigraphy
portes grátis
Dynamic Epigraphy
New Approaches to Inscriptions
Cousins, Eleri H
Oxbow Books
02/2022
232
Mole
Inglês
9781789257892
15 a 20 dias
Descrição não disponível.
List of figures
List of abbreviations
Editor's acknowledgments
1. Introduction: Thoughts on the nature of inscriptions
Eleri H. Cousins
2. Towards a theoretical model of the epigraphic landscape
Kelsey Jackson Williams
3. Materializing epigraphy: Archaeological and sociolinguistic approaches to Roman inscribed spindle whorls
Alex Mullen
4. Written to be (un)read, written to be seen: Beyond Latin codes in Latin epigraphy
M. Cristina de la Escosura Balbas, Elena Duce Pastor and David Serrano Lozano
5. Epigraphic strategies of communication: The visual accusative of Roman Republican dedications of spoils
Fabio Luci
6. Inscribing the artistic space: Blurred boundaries on Romano-British tombstones
Hanneke Salisbury
7. When poetry comes to its senses: Inscribed Roman verse and the human sensorium
Chiara Cenati, Victoria Gonzalez Berdus and Peter Kruschwitz
8. Lassi viatores: Poetic consumption between Martial's Epigrams and the Carmina Latina Epigraphica
Alessandra Tafaro
9. Epigraphy and critical fabulation: Imagining narratives of Greco-Roman sexual slavery
Deborah Kamen and Sarah Levin-Richardson
List of abbreviations
Editor's acknowledgments
1. Introduction: Thoughts on the nature of inscriptions
Eleri H. Cousins
2. Towards a theoretical model of the epigraphic landscape
Kelsey Jackson Williams
3. Materializing epigraphy: Archaeological and sociolinguistic approaches to Roman inscribed spindle whorls
Alex Mullen
4. Written to be (un)read, written to be seen: Beyond Latin codes in Latin epigraphy
M. Cristina de la Escosura Balbas, Elena Duce Pastor and David Serrano Lozano
5. Epigraphic strategies of communication: The visual accusative of Roman Republican dedications of spoils
Fabio Luci
6. Inscribing the artistic space: Blurred boundaries on Romano-British tombstones
Hanneke Salisbury
7. When poetry comes to its senses: Inscribed Roman verse and the human sensorium
Chiara Cenati, Victoria Gonzalez Berdus and Peter Kruschwitz
8. Lassi viatores: Poetic consumption between Martial's Epigrams and the Carmina Latina Epigraphica
Alessandra Tafaro
9. Epigraphy and critical fabulation: Imagining narratives of Greco-Roman sexual slavery
Deborah Kamen and Sarah Levin-Richardson
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.
anthropology; Archaeological Method & Theory; archaeology; art history; critical fabulation; Early Modern & Modern Humanities & Cultures/Language & Literature; early modern Scotland; Epigraphy; evidence; Greco-Roman world; history; inscriptions; intertextuality; language; linguistics; literary texts; phenomenology; philology; Republican Rome; translingualism; visuality
List of figures
List of abbreviations
Editor's acknowledgments
1. Introduction: Thoughts on the nature of inscriptions
Eleri H. Cousins
2. Towards a theoretical model of the epigraphic landscape
Kelsey Jackson Williams
3. Materializing epigraphy: Archaeological and sociolinguistic approaches to Roman inscribed spindle whorls
Alex Mullen
4. Written to be (un)read, written to be seen: Beyond Latin codes in Latin epigraphy
M. Cristina de la Escosura Balbas, Elena Duce Pastor and David Serrano Lozano
5. Epigraphic strategies of communication: The visual accusative of Roman Republican dedications of spoils
Fabio Luci
6. Inscribing the artistic space: Blurred boundaries on Romano-British tombstones
Hanneke Salisbury
7. When poetry comes to its senses: Inscribed Roman verse and the human sensorium
Chiara Cenati, Victoria Gonzalez Berdus and Peter Kruschwitz
8. Lassi viatores: Poetic consumption between Martial's Epigrams and the Carmina Latina Epigraphica
Alessandra Tafaro
9. Epigraphy and critical fabulation: Imagining narratives of Greco-Roman sexual slavery
Deborah Kamen and Sarah Levin-Richardson
List of abbreviations
Editor's acknowledgments
1. Introduction: Thoughts on the nature of inscriptions
Eleri H. Cousins
2. Towards a theoretical model of the epigraphic landscape
Kelsey Jackson Williams
3. Materializing epigraphy: Archaeological and sociolinguistic approaches to Roman inscribed spindle whorls
Alex Mullen
4. Written to be (un)read, written to be seen: Beyond Latin codes in Latin epigraphy
M. Cristina de la Escosura Balbas, Elena Duce Pastor and David Serrano Lozano
5. Epigraphic strategies of communication: The visual accusative of Roman Republican dedications of spoils
Fabio Luci
6. Inscribing the artistic space: Blurred boundaries on Romano-British tombstones
Hanneke Salisbury
7. When poetry comes to its senses: Inscribed Roman verse and the human sensorium
Chiara Cenati, Victoria Gonzalez Berdus and Peter Kruschwitz
8. Lassi viatores: Poetic consumption between Martial's Epigrams and the Carmina Latina Epigraphica
Alessandra Tafaro
9. Epigraphy and critical fabulation: Imagining narratives of Greco-Roman sexual slavery
Deborah Kamen and Sarah Levin-Richardson
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.
anthropology; Archaeological Method & Theory; archaeology; art history; critical fabulation; Early Modern & Modern Humanities & Cultures/Language & Literature; early modern Scotland; Epigraphy; evidence; Greco-Roman world; history; inscriptions; intertextuality; language; linguistics; literary texts; phenomenology; philology; Republican Rome; translingualism; visuality