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Archaic Greek Epigram and Dedication:

Representation and Reperformance
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Cambridge University Press, 2010/10/28 - 321 ページ
Together with sacrifice, prayer, and libation, offering dedications was a basic religious activity among ancient Greeks. By the end of the Archaic period (c. 480 B.C.), sanctuaries were bursting with dedications, including finer ones such as statues bearing epigrams. Scholarly treatments have focused on formal matters and, more recently, the function of dedications as social display. This is the first study to view dedications comprehensively as sites of ritual efficacy and, especially, to recover epigram's reflections of and contributions to that efficacy and restore it to an important place in the panorama of Greek religious practice.To reconstruct the Archaic experience of reading and viewing, the book draws on studies of traditional poetic language as resonant with immanent meaning, early Greek poetry as socially and religiously effective performance, and viewing art as an active response of aesthetic appreciation.
  

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目次

chapter 1 Representation and reperformance
1
chapter 2 Contexts of encounters and the question of reading
26
chapter 3 Presenting the dedication
85
chapter 4 Presenting the god
130
chapter 5 Presenting the dedicator
181
chapter 6 Presenting the act of dedicating
232

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著者について (2010)

Joseph W. Day is Professor of Classics at Wabash College, Indiana and frequent Senior Associate Member of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens. He is the author of The Glory of Athens: The Popular Tradition in Aelius Aristides (1980); but subsequently he has focused on earlier inscribed Greek epigram, contributing to many journals and edited collections on that subject.

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