Publication

2000 - Stanford University Press, Stanford, Calif, California

Language

English

Word Count

61,750 words, Guess

Page Count

247 pages

Identifiers

and 2 more
  • LibraryThing3362196
  • Goodreads436474

Classifications

  • DDC821/.7093238
  • LCCPR127 .F47 2000

Description

"The study of Greece as an icon of culture appears to be as old as Greece itself. In Silent Urns, the author reveals how Greece attained such significance as the result of the attempt to reconcile individuality, freedom, history, and modernity in eighteenth-century aesthetics. He argues that Winckelmann's History of Ancient Art (1764) produced this reconciliation by developing a concept of culture that effectively defined our modern understanding of the term, as well as our sense of what it is to be modern. From this reconciliation, Greece emerges as the form in which culture is first conceptualized as a historically and politically defined category."--BOOK JACKET.

Subjects

Topics

TheoryGreeceHellenismKnowledgeHellenism.ClassicismRomanticism

Places

Times

Series Statement

  • Cultural memory in the present

Other Editions

  • Silent urns: Romanticism, Hellenism, modernityStanford University Press2000-01-01

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