Pindar, Song, and Space

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A01=Leslie Kurke
A01=Richard Neer
Ancient Greece
Ancient Rome
archaeology
architecture
Athens
Author_Leslie Kurke
Author_Richard Neer
Category=DSBB
Category=NHC
Category=NK
choral lyric
Classical Greece
cultural geography
Cyrene
Delphi
Epinician
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Greek archaeology
landscape
lyric poetry
Metrology
Olympia
phenomenology
Pindar
sculpture
spatiality
urbanism
Victory Odes

Product details

  • ISBN 9781421429786
  • Weight: 1134g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 31 Dec 2019
  • Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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A groundbreaking study of the interaction of poetry, performance, and the built environment in ancient Greece.

Winner of the PROSE Award for Best Book in Classics by the Association of American Publishers

In this volume, Richard Neer and Leslie Kurke develop a new, integrated approach to classical Greece: a "lyric archaeology" that combines literary and art-historical analysis with archaeological and epigraphic materials. At the heart of the book is the great poet Pindar of Thebes, best known for his magnificent odes in honor of victors at the Olympic Games and other competitions. Unlike the quintessentially personal genre of modern lyric, these poems were destined for public performance by choruses of dancing men. Neer and Kurke go further to show that they were also site-specific: as the dancers moved through the space of a city or a sanctuary, their song would refer to local monuments and landmarks. Part of Pindar's brief, they argue, was to weave words and bodies into elaborate tapestries of myth and geography and, in so doing, to re-imagine the very fabric of the city-state. Pindar's poems, in short, were tools for making sense of space.

Recent scholarship has tended to isolate poetry, art, and archaeology. But Neer and Kurke show that these distinctions are artificial. Poems, statues, bronzes, tombs, boundary stones, roadways, beacons, and buildings worked together as a "suite" of technologies for organizing landscapes, cityscapes, and territories. Studying these technologies in tandem reveals the procedures and criteria by which the Greeks understood relations of nearness and distance, "here" and "there"—and how these ways of inhabiting space were essentially political.

Rooted in close readings of individual poems, buildings, and works of art, Pindar, Song, and Space ranges from Athens to Libya, Sicily to Rhodes, to provide a revelatory new understanding of the world the Greeks built—and a new model for studying the ancient world.

Richard Neer is the Barbara E. and Richard J. Franke Distinguished Service Professor in Art History, Cinema and Media Studies, and the College at the University of Chicago. He is the author of The Emergence of the Classical Style in Greek Sculpture. Leslie Kurke is the Gladys Rehard Wood Professor of Classics and Comparative Literature at the University of California, Berkeley. She is the author of The Traffic in Praise: Pindar and the Poetics of Social Economy.

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