The Roman Gaze: Vision, Power, and the BodyDavid Fredrick JHU Press, 18.11.2002 - 334 Seiten The Roman Gaze: Vision, Power, and the Body uses the concept of "the gaze" to examine literary, visual, and material evidence that reveals the contribution of ancient Rome to the development of Western culture. Contributors draw upon a wide range of theoretical methods, using visual and body theory from various fields and period specializations. Topics include violence and gender in Senecan theater, literary representations of erotic love within a hierarchical and violent Rome, and the differing appeal of artistic depictions designed for visual consumption by both genders. Boldly interdisciplinary, The Roman Gaze will interest readers in history, classics, literature, art, and cinema. Contributors: Carlin Barton, Cindy Benton, John R. Clarke, Anthony Corbeill, Katherine Owen Eldred, David Fredrick, Pamela Gordon, Zahra Newby, and Alison R. Sharrock. |
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... society of both spectacle and surveillance , much of its art and literature cannot be simply described as ocularcentric . Monstrum that it is for both theoretical positions , Rome has become invisible . Theories of the Gaze With the ...
... society . As competition drives the elite into the arms of luxuria , it is increasingly difficult to see them as the masters of their own appetites . Conspicuous pleasure penetrates the penetrators . Unlike the penetration model ...
... society . As competition drives the elite into the arms of luxuria , it is increasingly difficult to see them as the masters of their own appetites . Conspicuous pleasure penetrates the penetrators . Unlike the penetration model ...
... society that patronize painting ( 1988.38-39 ) : We have been moving towards a notion of a Quattrocento cognitive style . By this one would mean the equipment that the fifteenth - century painter's public brought to complex visual ...
... society , and so relies on Bourdieu's The Logic of Practice ( 1990 ) . In this work , Bourdieu uses the Kabyle , a traditional , precapitalist society in North Africa , as his subjects , and discovers essentially two habitus , one of ...
Inhalt
Split Vision The Politics of the Gaze in Senecas Troades | 31 |
This Ship of Fools Epic Vision in Lucans Vulteius Ep | 57 |
Some Unseen Monster Rereading Lucretius on Sex | 86 |
Reading Programs in GrecoRoman Art Reflections on the Spada Reliefs | 110 |
Look Whos Laughing at Sex Men and Women Viewers in the Apodyterium of the Suburban Baths at Pompeii | 149 |
Political Movement Walking and Ideology in Republican Rome | 182 |
Being in the Eyes Shame and Sight in Ancient Rome | 216 |
Mapping Penetrability in Late Republican and Early Imperial Rome | 236 |
Looking at Looking Can You Resist a Reading? | 265 |
297 | |
323 | |
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