Archaeology and the Pan-European Romanesque Archaeology and the Pan-European Romanesque
Debates in Archaeology

Archaeology and the Pan-European Romanesque

    • 29,99 €
    • 29,99 €

Publisher Description

Romanesque is the style name given to the art and architecture of Europe in the eleventh and twelfth centuries. First used in the early nineteenth century to express the perceived indebtedness of the visual-artistic and architectural cultures of this period to their Classical antecedents, the term has survived two centuries of increasingly sophisticated readings of the relevant medieval buildings and objet d'art. The study of Romanesque as a stylistic phenomenon is now almost exclusively the preserve of art historians, particularly in the English-speaking world. Here 'the Romanesque' is subjected to a long overdue, theoretically-informed, archaeological inquiry. The ideological foundations and epistemological boundaries of Romanesque scholarship are critiqued, and the constructs of 'Romanesque' and 'Europe' are deconstructed, and alternative strategies for interpreting Romanesque's constituent material are mapped out. This book should, at the very least, illuminate the need for debate.

GENRE
History
RELEASED
2015
2 March
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
144
Pages
PUBLISHER
Bloomsbury Academic
SIZE
7.4
MB

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