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Pompei, Insula IX 8: Vecchi e nuovi scavi (1879–)

Pompei, Insula IX 8: Vecchi e nuovi scavi (1879–)

This volume is the second in a series that will publish 19 years of archaeological research on the insula of the Casa del Centenario (IX 8) at Pompeii by Alma Mater Studiorum – University of Bologna. It presents results deriving from both late 19th century work and the more recent excavations undertaken between 1999 and 2004 in this well-known property. More than 60 essays are integrated into the primary text by Coralini, arranged in two major parts and focused first on the original clearance of eruptive debris from the property and second on the finds produced by pre-79 C.E.

Gender and Body Language in Roman Art

Gender and Body Language in Roman Art

In December 2018, a statue of Emmeline Pankhurst was dedicated in St. Peter’s Square, Manchester, England. Standing on a kitchen chair as makeshift rostrum, with her arm outstretched in forceful appeal, Pankhurst adjures suffragettes and other women to rise up and demand the vote. This statue is one of the very few public statues in the world to honor women, and its bold and typically male open pose asserts Pankhurst’s challenge to masculine public space in the early 20th century.

Hellenistic Pottery: The Fine Wares

Hellenistic Pottery: The Fine Wares

In this volume, James seeks to address a problem posed and lacuna unfilled by Edwards’ Corinthian Hellenistic Pottery (Corinth 7.3 [Princeton 1975]): the chronology of Corinthian Hellenistic fine ware and the quantities in which it occurs. James proposes substantial adjustments to both the beginning and end dates of its production at Corinth.

The Agora Bone Well

The Agora Bone Well

The Agora Bone Well presents the study of more than 460 humans (mostly newborn infants) and 150 dogs, along with the artifacts deposited in a well near the Athenian Agora. Dorothy B. Thompson excavated the well more than 80 years ago. It has remained largely forgotten, except for an occasional suggestion that its assemblage represented plague, human sacrifice, or large-scale infanticide. The nuanced analysis of the evidence from this cold case tells a heartbreaking tale of all-too-ordinary life and death in ancient Greece.

Lexicon of Eponym Dies on Rhodian Amphora Stamps

Lexicon of Eponym Dies on Rhodian Amphora Stamps

Most Rhodian transport amphoras had a stamp on each handle; one named the annually chang­ing eponym priest of Halios and the other an individual, in one instance called ergasteriarchas, whose role is disputed, and whom archae­ologists commonly refer to as fabricants or “pro­ducers.” The eponym stamps in particular are of vital im­portance to the chronology of the Rhodian amphoras and the contexts in which they occur and, by implication, for mapping the fluctuations of the amphora-borne trade of Hellenistic Rhodes.

The Early Hellenistic Peloponnese: Politics, Economies, and Networks 338–197 BC.

The Early Hellenistic Peloponnese: Politics, Economies, and Networks 338–197 BC.

Though we possess a general picture regarding the Peloponnesian peninsula for the period this book describes, between the Battle of Chaironeia and the Macedonian defeat against the Romans in the Battle of Kynoskephalai, “the present study examines an under-researched topic” (1). The conventional picture of the Early Hellenistic Peloponnese Shipley alludes to is that of a region oppressed by the Macedonian kings, ruined by warfare and tyranny.

Greek Art and Aesthetics in the Fourth Century B.C.

Greek Art and Aesthetics in the Fourth Century B.C.

Scholarly books dedicated exclusively to Greek art of the fourth century B.C.E. are few in number. Prior to the current volume’s publication, those most recent and widely known focus on sculpture—original and copy, architectural, and relief. This emphasis is not surprising given that no original painted panels survive, although publications on the tomb paintings from late fourth-century Macedonia discovered since the 1970s have significantly amplified the study of painting of that period and beyond.

Selinus VI: Die Altäre in den Stadtheiligtümern. Studien zur westgriechischen Altararchitektur im 6. und 5. Jahrhundert v. Chr.

Selinus VI: Die Altäre in den Stadtheiligtümern. Studien zur westgriechischen Altararchitektur im 6. und 5. Jahrhundert v. Chr.

Voigts’ book, the revision of a dissertation accepted at the Technical University of Munich in 2011, contains a detailed architectural study of sixth- and fifth-century B.C.E. monumental altars in the urban sanctuaries of Selinus, followed by general discussion of the architectural development of monumental altars in Sicily and Magna Graecia, including the altars in the extra-urban sanctuaries of Selinus.

Non-scribal Communication Media in the Bronze Age Aegean and Surrounding Areas: The Semantics of A-literate and Proto-literate Media (Seals, Potmarks, Mason’s Marks, Seal-Impressed Pottery, Ideograms and Logograms, and Related Systems)

Non-scribal Communication Media in the Bronze Age Aegean and Surrounding Areas: The Semantics of A-literate and Proto-literate Media (Seals, Potmarks, Mason’s Marks, Seal-Impressed Pottery, Ideograms and Logograms, and Related Systems)

“We live our lives surrounded by text,” writes Bennet in his thought-provoking concluding commentary to this volume (247). He also observes that ours is a “hybrid world where verbal and non-verbal visual communication exist side-by-side” (248). Case in point and much to my chagrin, my own phone texts are increasingly punctuated by emojis.[[AU: Correct to edit this to say your own texts? or did you mean those you receive?]] This volume is an exploration of the hybridity of communication in the ancient eastern Mediterranean.

Communities, Landscapes, and Interaction in Neolithic Greece

Communities, Landscapes, and Interaction in Neolithic Greece

This edited volume brings together international scholars working on a wide range of topics and perspectives relating to the Greek Neolithic. The variable archaeological record and the localized trajectories characteristic of this period are celebrated by collaborative and multidisciplinary contributions that touch on many, but not all, regions of Greece. The volume provides an updated account of Neolithic research in Greece and outlines successfully the multitude of methodological and theoretical underpinnings that currently shape its agenda.

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