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Reuse and Renovation in Roman Material Culture

Reuse and Renovation in Roman Material Culture

Reuse and Renovation in Roman Material Culture

Functions, Aesthetics, Interpretations
Diana Y. Ng, University of Michigan, Dearborn
Molly Swetnam-Burland, College of William and Mary, Virginia
November 2019
Available
Paperback
9781108461702

    This book explores the spoliation of architectural and sculptural materials during the Roman empire. Examining a wide range of materials, including imperial portraits, statues associated with master craftsmen, architectural moldings and fixtures, tombs and sarcophagi, arches and gateways, it demonstrates that secondary intervention was common well before Late Antiquity, in fact, centuries earlier than has been previously acknowledged. The essays in this volume, written by a team of international experts, collectively argue that reuse was a natural feature of human manipulation of the physical environment, rather than a sign of social pressure. Reuse often reflected appreciation for the function, form, and design of the material culture of earlier eras. Political, social, religious, and economic factors also contributed to the practice. A comprehensive overview of spoliation and reuse, this volume examines the phenomenon in Rome and throughout the Mediterranean world.

    • Argues that the practice of 'spoliation' was prevalent in the high Roman empire, earlier than previously supposed, and a natural feature of human manipulation of the physical environment rather than a sign of decay or social pressure
    • Deals with the social and political contexts of re-used materials
    • Opens new lines of inquiry in the field of classical studies, appealing to scholars of the ancient, late antique, and medieval periods

    Reviews & endorsements

    '… this is the first book entirely dedicated to reuse and renovation in the Roman world; it is an invaluable contribution to the field and provides an important jumping off point for future studies." Bryn Mawr Classical Review

    ‘Throughout, the volume is impressively well illustrated. It is wide ranging, informative, challenging and thought provoking. It is one of the best edited volumes I have read for some time. While each paper has a specific aim, sight of the bigger picture and wider context is never lost. Moreover, the fact that the papers communicate with each other throughout the volume is indicative of both careful editing and collaborative participation by the contributors in the overall process. The success of this volume means that there is good scope to broaden the contributions to include extra-urban regions and more provinces in future endeavours.’ Rebecca J. Sweetman, The Journal of Roman Studies

    See more reviews

    Product details

    November 2019
    Paperback
    9781108461702
    291 pages
    175 × 255 × 15 mm
    0.55kg
    77 b/w illus. 1 map
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Introduction. 'Reuse, renovation, reiteration' Diana Y. Ng and Molly Swetnam-Burland
    • 1. 'The reuse and redisplay of honorific statues in Pompeii' Brenda Longfellow
    • 2. 'The Vigiles, dynastic succession and symbolic reappropriation in the Caserma dei Vigili at Ostia' Margaret L. Laird
    • 3. 'The epigraphy of appropriation: retrospective signatures of Greek sculptors in the Roman World' Catherine M. Keesling
    • 4. 'Gateways to the past: the Hadrianic architecture of procession in Pisidian Antioch and Athens' Adrian J. Ossi
    • 5. 'Visual literacy and reuse in the architecture of late Imperial Rome' Elisha Ann Dumser
    • 6. 'Urban transformations at Aphrodisias in Late Antiquity: destruction or intentional preservation?' Esen Ogus
    • 7. 'Acquiring the antique in Byzantine Rome: the economics of architectural reuse at Santa Maria Antiqua' Gregor Kalas
    • 8. 'The afterlife of the amphitheater: cultural biography and social memory at Tarragona' Sheila Bond.
      Contributors
    • Diana Y. Ng, Molly Swetnam-Burland, Brenda Longfellow, Margaret L. Laird, Catherine M. Keesling, Adrian J. Ossi, Elisha Ann Dumser, Esen Ogus, Gregor Kalas, Sheila Bonde

    • Editors
    • Diana Y. Ng , University of Michigan, Dearborn

      Diana Y. Ng is Associate Professor of Art History, Department of Literature, Philosophy, and the Arts, University of Michigan, Dearborn. Her scholarship focuses on the public art and architecture of the Roman empire, especially in the Greek East. She has been published in the Journal of Roman Studies and Istanbuler Mitteilungen.

    • Molly Swetnam-Burland , College of William and Mary, Virginia

      Molly Swetnam-Burland is Associate Professor of Classical Studies at the College of William and Mary, Virginia, and is a scholar of Roman painting and sculpture. She is the author of Egypt in Italy: Visions of Egypt in Roman Imperial Culture (Cambridge, 2015).