Lehrende: Nisan Lordoglu
Veranstaltungsart: Seminar
Anzeige im Stundenplan:
Semesterwochenstunden: 2
Credits: 7,0
Unterrichtssprache: Englisch
Min. | Max. Teilnehmerzahl: - | -
Weitere Informationen: . WICHTIGE Hinweise vom Studienbüro zum SoSe 24
Kommentare/ Inhalte: Unterrichtssprache englisch The accumulation of portrait statuary and its re-appropriation is a fact that we know from literary and epigraphic sources. From the glaring examples of Claudius’ clearing of the Forum in Rome to letters from curators in Ephesos to Marcus Aurelius to the Theodosian Code, the issue of what to do with old statues whose honorands were long dead and sometimes totally forgotten was a recurring problem for the city of the Roman Empire, for a culture so invested in statuary. The aim of this lecture is to delve into the intricacies of carving techniques, exploring the practices of reworking and reusing, and seeking to understand reasons behind these methods.
Lernziel: Basic information regarding late antique portraiture, along with insights into carving techniques in related to reworking and reusing practices.
Vorgehen: Kontingent Studium Generale: 0 Teilnahmebegrenzung: Nein Block-LV: Nein Sonstiges: Veranstaltung im Rahmen des aktuellen Fachbereichs-Schwerpunktes „MenschenBilder" Uni-Live: Nein Kontingent Kontaktstudierende: 3 Anforderungen: Literature should be prepared according to the week's topic. Please note that presentations should also be in English. Hausarbeiten may be written in German. Attendance is a requirement. If a student has more than two absences from a course, he/she will be considered to be in "default". 5 LP: 25 min. Presentation + Paper (ca. 3500 words) 7 LP: 35 min. Presentation + Hausarbeit (ca. 4500 words)
Literatur: Bergmann, M., & Zanker, P. (1981). Damnatio memoriae. Umgearbeitete Nero- und Domitiansporträts. Zur Ikonographie der flavischen Kaiser und des Nerva, Jahrbuch des Deutschen Archäologischen Instituts 96, 317-412. Jacobs, I., & Stirling, L. M. (2017). Re-using the gods: A 6th-c. statuary display at Sagalassos and a re-evaluation of pagan mythological statuary in Early Byzantine civic space, Journal of Roman archaeology 30, 197-226. Kinney, D. (1997). Spolia. Damnatio and renovatio memoriae, Memoirs of the American Academy in Rome 42, 117-148. Varner, E. R. (2004). Mutilation and transformation: Damnatio memoriae and Roman imperial portraiture. Leiden; Boston: Brill.
Modulkürzel: BA: EPS, NF-V HamBord NF KlArch 6 (6 LP)