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Romancing Antiquity

Romancing Antiquity
Author: George E. McCarthy
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages: 426
Release: 1997
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 9780847685295

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In this unique and comprehensive book, George McCarthy examines the influence of Greek philosophy, literature, arts, and politics on the development of twentieth-century German social thought. McCarthy demonstrates that the classical spirit vitalized thinkers such as Weber, Heidegger, Freud, Marcuse, Arendt, Gadamer, and Habermas. With the romancing of antiquity, they transformed their understanding of the modern self, political community, and Enlightenment rationality. By viewing contemporary social theory from the framework of the classical world, McCarthy argues, we are capable of thinking beyond the limits of modernity to new possibilities of human reason, science, beauty, and social justice.


Romantic Antiquity

Romantic Antiquity
Author: Jonathan Sachs
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 317
Release: 2010-02-04
Genre: History
ISBN: 0195376129

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This work argues that Rome is relevant to the Romantic period not as the continuation of an earlier neoclassicism, but rather as a concept that is simultaneously transformed and transformative: transformed in the sense that new models of historical thinking produced a changed understandings of historicity itself.


Romancing the Maya

Romancing the Maya
Author: R. Tripp Evans
Publisher: University of Texas Press
Total Pages: 224
Release: 2010-06-28
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 0292789262

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During Mexico's first century of independence, European and American explorers rediscovered its pre-Hispanic past. Finding the jungle-covered ruins of lost cities and artifacts inscribed with unintelligible hieroglyphs—and having no idea of the age, authorship, or purpose of these antiquities—amateur archaeologists, artists, photographers, and religious writers set about claiming Mexico's pre-Hispanic patrimony as a rightful part of the United States' cultural heritage. In this insightful work, Tripp Evans explores why nineteenth-century Americans felt entitled to appropriate Mexico's cultural heritage as the United States' own. He focuses in particular on five well-known figures—American writer and amateur archaeologist John Lloyd Stephens, British architect Frederick Catherwood, Joseph Smith, founder of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, and the French émigré photographers Désiré Charnay and Augustus Le Plongeon. Setting these figures in historical and cultural context, Evans uncovers their varying motives, including the Manifest Destiny-inspired desire to create a national museum of American antiquities in New York City, the attempt to identify the ancient Maya as part of the Lost Tribes of Israel (and so substantiate the Book of Mormon), and the hope of proving that ancient Mesoamerica was the cradle of North American and even Northern European civilization. Fascinating stories in themselves, these accounts of the first explorers also add an important new chapter to the early history of Mesoamerican archaeology.


Wonders of the Past

Wonders of the Past
Author: Sir John Alexander Hammerton
Publisher:
Total Pages: 640
Release: 1924
Genre: Archaeology
ISBN:

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Sulamith: A Romance of Antiquity

Sulamith: A Romance of Antiquity
Author: Aleksandr Ivanovich Kuprin
Publisher: Library of Alexandria
Total Pages: 115
Release: 2020-09-28
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1465591591

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A novel about the love of King Solomon for a servant girl.


The Ancient Romances

The Ancient Romances
Author: Ben E. Perry
Publisher: University of California Press
Total Pages: 420
Release: 2021-05-28
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0520360338

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This title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which commemorates University of California Press’s mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in 1967.


Wonders of the Past

Wonders of the Past
Author: Sir John Alexander Hammerton
Publisher:
Total Pages: 582
Release: 1933
Genre: Archaeology
ISBN:

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Gothic Antiquity

Gothic Antiquity
Author: Dale Townshend
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Total Pages: 432
Release: 2019-09-26
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0198845669

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Gothic Antiquity: History, Romance, and the Architectural Imagination, 1760-1840 provides the first sustained scholarly account of the relationship between Gothic architecture and Gothic literature (fiction; poetry; drama) in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. Although the relationship between literature and architecture is a topic that has long preoccupied scholars of the literary Gothic, there remains, to date, no monograph-length study of the intriguing and complex interactions between these two aesthetic forms. Equally, Gothic literature has received only the most cursory of treatments in art-historical accounts of the early Gothic Revival in architecture, interiors, and design. In addressing this gap in contemporary scholarship, Gothic Antiquity seeks to situate Gothic writing in relation to the Gothic-architectural theories, aesthetics, and practices with which it was contemporary, providing closely historicized readings of a wide selection of canonical and lesser-known texts and writers. Correspondingly, it shows how these architectural debates responded to, and were to a certain extent shaped by, what we have since come to identify as the literary Gothic mode. In both its 'survivalist' and 'revivalist' forms, the architecture of the Middle Ages in the long eighteenth century was always much more than a matter of style. Incarnating, for better or for worse, the memory of a vanished 'Gothic' age in the modern, enlightened present, Gothic architecture, be it ruined or complete, prompted imaginative reconstructions of the nation's past--a notable 'visionary' turn, as the antiquary John Pinkerton put it in 1788, in which Gothic writers, architects, and antiquaries enthusiastically participated. The volume establishes a series of dialogues between Gothic literature, architectural history, and the antiquarian interest in the material remains of the Gothic past, and argues that these discrete yet intimately related approaches to vernacular antiquity are most fruitfully read in relation to one another.


Wonders of the past

Wonders of the past
Author: Sir John Alexander Hammerton
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 1923
Genre: Archaeology
ISBN:

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Wonders of the Past

Wonders of the Past
Author: J. A. Hammerton
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 1922
Genre:
ISBN:

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