EAN13
9781913645496
ISBN
978-1-913645-49-6
Éditeur
Paul Holberton Publishing
Date de publication
Nombre de pages
96
Dimensions
26 x 21,7 x 1 cm
Poids
470 g
Langue
français
Fiches UNIMARC
S'identifier

Islanders

The Making of the Modern Mediterranean

Paul Holberton Publishing

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Accompagnant une exposition au Fitzwilliam Museum, à Cambridge, ce livre explore les identités insulaires dans la Méditerranée antique, s’interrogeant sur la façon don't « l’insularité » (caractère propre à une île) affecta et influença la production et la créativité de l’art, l’évolution architecturale, les migrations et le mouvement des gens. Il s’étend au-delà de l’Antiquité, intégrant des discours actuels sur les identités culturelles insulaires par rapport à celles des continents, y compris celle de la Grande-Bretagne, identité insulaire débattue.
Throughout history, islands have been treated as distinct places, unlike mainland and continental masses. In geographic terms, islands are merely pieces of land surrounded by water, but the perception of island life has never been neutral. Rather, the term ‘insularity’ – belonging to/being of an island – has been romanticized
and associated with otherness. Islands have often been deemed to have different histories from the mainland and with more readily isolated socio-political, cultural and economic characteristics. Yet connectivity has also been an important feature of island life as the sea can be a linking rather than just a dividing body, motivating and maintaining informal and formal connections. 
Fifty unique archaeological objects – most never displayed before outside Cyprus, Crete and Sardinia – tell exceptional stories of insular identity, over a period of 4000 years. The movement of people and episodes of migration between islands and their surrounding mainlands is also explored, through architecture, material culture, crafts and technologies present in the Mediterranean islands.
Islanders has a broad diachronic scope and applies integrative analytical approach, bringing together research findings from scientific fields within archaeology, as well as a multi-scalar approach to past human interaction within continental and island environments.
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