Intimità a Pompei
Anna Anguissola
Geisteswissenschaften, Kunst, Musik / Altertum
Beschreibung
This book revolves around the shaping of Roman domestic space and cultural issues of privacy and representativeness. At the core is a set of lavish rooms where layout, architecture and décor bespeak the presence of one or two beds suitable for sleep or daytime rest. For the first time, the author restores the rich contextual readings regarding the dense network of location, architecture, accessibility, lighting, landscape, decoration. In Pompeian houses alcove cubicula were among the key reception rooms. Their images acted as prime symbols of power, as real weapons in strategies of distinction. Luxury, lifestyle, prestige, and the debates around them seem to be primarily related to the design of these comparatively small environments. No other type of room shows such quick adaptation to the most up-to-date trends, owing to a series of real revolutions in fashion first developed for lavish patrician residences, then spread among medium-, later even small-size abodes throughout town. In the realm of domestic life, alcove rooms constitute a sound source for inquiring into the different tastes of Pompeii's various social groups. Defined by financial means and social affluence, their tastes ranged from aesthetics of luxury to an ordinary reception of trivialized clichés.
Rezensionen
<p>"Em suma, o estudo agora apresentado vale pela qualidade da investigação que traduz, pelas conclusões a que chega, mas também pela inovação, pois não se limitando a ficar pela análise literária ou pela leitura iconográfica e integrando a observação e sistematização arqueológica permite uma interpretação mais abrangente e pertinentemente globalizante do que as que outros estudos sobre os espaços da intimidade, <em>lato sensu</em>, nos habituaram."
Kundenbewertungen
Archaeology of Built Environment, Roman Housing, Pompeji, Wohnraum in der römischen Antike, Roman Domestic Architecture, Archäologie der gebauten Umwelt, Social Archaeology, Römische Privatarchitektur, Sozialarchäologie, Pompeii