Spatialities of Byzantine Culture from the Human Body to the Universe / edited by Myrto Veikou and Ingela Nilsson.

Format
Book
Language
  • English
  • French
Εdition
1st ed.
Published/​Created
Leiden ; Boston : Brill, 2022.
Description
1 online resource (705 pages)

Details

Subject(s)
Editor
Series
The Medieval Mediterranean ; 133. [More in this series]
Summary note
  • Compensating a four-decades shortfall, this collective volume is the first reader in Byzantine spatial studies. It offers a diversity of topics and scientific approaches, articulated by up-to-date interdisciplinary dialogue, and reflects on the future challenges of Byzantine spatial studies.
  • “Space Matters!” claimed Doreen Massey and John Allen at the heart of the Spatial Turn developments (1984). Compensating a four-decades shortfall, this collective volume is the first reader in Byzantine spatial studies. It contextualizes the spatial turn in historical studies by means of interdisciplinary dialogue. An introduction offers an up-to-date state of the art. Twenty-nine case studies provide a wide range of different conceptualizations of space in Byzantine culture articulated in a single collection through a variety of topics and approaches. An afterword frames the future challenges of Byzantine spatial studies in a changing world where space is a claim and a precarious social value. Contributors are Ilias Anagnostakis, Alexander Beihammer, Helena Bodin, Darlene L. Brooks Hedstrom, Béatrice Caseau Chevallier, Paolo Cesaretti, Michael J. Decker, Veronica della Dora, Rico Franses, Sauro Gelichi, Adam J. Goldwyn, Basema Hamarneh, Richard Hodges, Brad Hostetler, Adam Izdebski, Liz James, P. Nick Kardulias, Isabel Kimmelfield, Tonia Kiousopoulou, Johannes Koder, Derek Krueger, Tomasz Labuk, Maria Leontsini, Yulia Mantova, Charis Messis, Konstantinos Moustakas, Margaret Mullett, Ingela Nilsson, Robert G. Ousterhout, Georgios Pallis, Myrto Veikou, Joanita Vroom, David Westberg, and Enrico Zanini.
Bibliographic references
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Source of description
Description based on print version record.
Language note
English and French.
Contents
  • Half Title
  • Series Information
  • Title Page
  • Copyright Page
  • Contents
  • Acknowledgements
  • List of Figures
  • Abbreviations
  • Notes on Contributors
  • (Byzantine) Space Matters! An Introduction
  • Bibliography
  • Part 1 The (Most) Private Space: The Human Body
  • Editorial Note on Part 1
  • 1 The Human Belly as a 'Natural Symbol': The Greek and Byzantine Anthropology of γαστήρ
  • 1 Peeping into Darkness: γαστήρ in the Greek-Byzantine Tradition
  • 2 Case Study No. 1: Γαστὴρ in the Byzantine Ascetic Tradition
  • 3 Case Study No. 2: The Gnawing Teeth of γαστήρ/ὕστερα and the Gorgon's Head
  • 4 Case Study no. 3: Die Like Arius!
  • 5 Case Study no. 4: The 'Non-Ascetic' Asceticism of the Drunken Monk Jacob
  • 6 A Final Case Study: The Monstrous Body and the Disembowelment of a Usurper
  • 2 Crime et châtiment à Byzance: Le corps humain comme espace public
  • 1 La διαπόμπευσις comme procédé exemplaire de spatialisation du corps
  • Bibliographie
  • 3 The World from Above: Divine Amphitheatres, Spiritual Watchtowers, and the Moral Spatialities of κατασκοπή
  • 1 From Skopiai to Theatra Mundi
  • 2 The Theatre of Creation
  • 3 The Theatre of Salvation
  • 4 Spiritual Watchtowers
  • 4 Space and Identity, a Located Negotiation: A Case Study on Mobile Bodies in Byzantine Hagiography
  • 1 Mobility and Walking
  • 2 Setting Boundaries
  • Part 2 Experienced Spaces: Human Bodies within Their Natural Environments
  • Editorial Note on Part 2
  • 5 Space-environment as Historical Actor in Byzantium
  • 1 Space as Enabler: Pathogens
  • 2 Space as Tele-Connector: Climatic Fluctuations
  • 3 Space as Partner: Anthropogenic Ecosystems and Landscapes
  • 6 In the Shadow of Virgil: The Significance of Butrint's Liminality in Deep Mediterranean History
  • 1 Albanian Thanks to Lord Grey.
  • 2 The Butrint Foundation Project: Re-envisioning the Liminality of Butrint
  • 3 Space and Time at Butrint: From the Bronze Age until Today
  • 4 The Importance of Topography in Narrative
  • 7 At Home in Cappadocia: The Spatialities of a Byzantine Domestic Landscape
  • 1 The Cappadocian House and Its Components
  • 2 Living in the Landscape
  • 3 Finding Comfort in Cappadocia
  • 8 A Byzantine Space Oddity: The Cultural Geography of Foodways and Cuisine in the Eastern Mediterranean (700-1500)
  • 1 Spatial Dimensions of Byzantine Food Preservation and Storage
  • 1.1 Athenian Pithoi
  • 1.2 Pithoi in a Wider Context
  • 2 The Spatial Dimensions of Byzantine Food Preparation with Heat
  • 2.1 The First Level: "A Designated Space for Cooking"
  • 2.2 The Second Level: "A Special Space for Cooking"
  • 2.3 The Third Level: "A Specialized Space" for Cooking
  • 3 The Spatial Dimensions of Byzantine Consumption
  • 3.1 Changing Table Wares
  • 3.2 Changing Eating Habits
  • 9 Space and Identity: Byzantine Conceptions of Geographic Belonging
  • 1 Terms and Paraphrases for Identity
  • 2 Identity and Space
  • 3 Local Identity: The Patris
  • 3.1 Polis and Politeuma
  • 3.2 Chorion and Kome
  • 3.3 Chora
  • 4 Regional Identity
  • 4.1 Klima
  • 4.2 Epeiros
  • 5 Supra-regional Identity
  • 5.1 Oikoumene
  • 5.2 Terms Related to Romania
  • 5.3 Terms Related to Barbaroi
  • 6 Soma and Space
  • Part 3 Anthropogenic Spaces: Byzantine Landscapes
  • Editorial Note on Part 3
  • 10 What Is a Byzantine Landscape?
  • 1 Byzantine Views
  • 2 Sacred and Religious Landscape
  • 3 Contemporary Views
  • 4 Space and Placemaking
  • 11 Adapting to the Cypriot Landscape: A Study of Medieval to Modern Occupation of the Malloura Valley
  • 1 Theoretical Perspective
  • 2 The Athienou Archaeological Project on Cyprus.
  • 12 Constructing New Cities, Creating New Spatialities: An Ethnoarchaeological Experiment
  • 1 Dara vs Littoria: A Bizarre or Useful Idea?
  • 2 Circles in the Water: The Economic Impact of a New City's Building Site
  • 3 New Socio-economic Spatiality in the Surrounding Countryside
  • 4 After the End: A New Micro-ecological Spatiality
  • 5 Concluding Remarks: Evaluation of the Experiment
  • 13 'The Humility of the Desert': The Symbolic and Cultural Landscapes of Egyptian Monasticism
  • 1 Why Study the Cultural Landscape? Theoretical Models
  • 2 The Physical Environment of the Cultural Landscape of Monasticism
  • 3 The Anthropogenic Structures of the Cultural Landscape of Monasticism
  • 4 The Things of the Cultural Landscape of Monasticism
  • 14 From the Ancient Demes to the Byzantine Villages: Transformations of the Landscape in the Countryside of Athens
  • Part 4 Empowered Spaces: Byzantine Territories
  • Editorial Note on Part 4
  • 15 L'inscription du pouvoir impérial dans l'espace urbain constantinopolitain à l'époque des Paléologues
  • 16 Byzantine Notions of the Balkans: Symbolic, Territorial and Ethnic Conceptions of Space, Sixth to Ninth Centuries
  • 17 The Partitioned Space of the Byzantine Peloponnese: From History to Political and Mythical Exploitation
  • 18 Spatial Concepts and Administrative Structures in the Byzantine-Turkish Frontier of Twelfth-Century Asia Minor
  • 1 Frontier Studies and Scholarly Debates on Byzantium's Eastern Borderland
  • 2 Ideological Expressions and Political Realities
  • 3 The Main Sections of the Byzantine-Turkish Frontier
  • 4 Conclusions
  • 19 The Other Than Self: Byzantium and the Venetian Identity
  • 1 Water and Golden Forks
  • 2 At the Dinner Table.
  • 3 Spolia, the Legacy of Byzantium and the Ancient World
  • 4 Burials and Kinship Memories
  • 5 Byzantine Venice?
  • Part 5 Performed Spaces: Spatialities of Cultural Practices
  • Editorial Note on Part 5
  • 20 Tents in Space, Space in Tents
  • 1 Transformations
  • 2 Identity and Community
  • 3 Transitional and Unstable Space
  • 21 Variations on the Definition of Sacred Space from Eusebius of Caesarea to Balsamon
  • 22 "Dwelling Place and Palace": The Theotokos as a "Living City" in Byzantine Hymns, Icons and Liturgical Practice
  • 1 Sacred Space and Sacred Places-Hierotopy and Chora
  • 2 Constantinople as Theotokoupolis
  • 3 The Akathistos Hymn and Theotokia
  • 4 Pokrov-The Protection of the Theotokos
  • 5 Partaking in the Chοra
  • 23 The Development of Religious Topography at Constantinople in the Fourth to Seventh Centuries
  • 1 Worship outside the Walls: Old Rome and New
  • 2 Processional Liturgy
  • 3 Protecting the City
  • 24 Mind the Gap: Mosaics on the Wall and the Space between Viewer and Viewed
  • Part 6 Imaginary Spaces: Byzantine Storyworlds
  • Editorial Note on Part 6
  • 25 The Phenomenology of Landscape in the Menologion of Basil ii
  • 26 Pachon's Progressive Return: Figurativity, Framing and Movement in Historica Lausiaca 23
  • 1 The Problem of 'Intuitive' Figurality
  • 2 Pachon as a Lost Sheep
  • 3 Mindsets as Determinants for Movement Frames
  • 27 Spaces Within, Spaces Beyond: Reassessing the Lives of the Holy Fools Symeon and Andrew (bhg 1677, 115z)
  • 1 Spaces 'Within'
  • 2 Spaces 'Beyond'
  • 3 Inner 'Space'
  • 28 Textualization of Space and Travel in Middle Byzantine Hagiography
  • 1 From the Seventh to the Tenth Century
  • 2 The Eleventh and Twelfth Centuries
  • Bibliography.
  • 29 The Visual Structure of Epigrams and the Experience of Byzantine Space: A Case Study on Reliquary Enkolpia of St Demetrios
  • Afterword: Byzantine Spacetime: A Rough Guide For Future Tourists to the Past
  • 1 Byzantine Spacetime Travel Requires Physical Spacetime Travelling Devices
  • 2 The Space We Explore Changed and Changes in Time
  • 3 Our Disciplines of Historical Understanding Depend on Spatial Metaphors
  • 4 Travel from Topography to Landscape Overlays Place with Meaning and Narrative
  • 5 Beware the Byzantine Butterfly Effect
  • Index.
ISBN
90-04-52300-6
LCCN
2022030196
Doi
  • 10.1163/9789004523005
Statement on language in description
Princeton University Library aims to describe library materials in a manner that is respectful to the individuals and communities who create, use, and are represented in the collections we manage. Read more...
Other views
Staff view