Thursday, February 25, 2021

Metropolitan Museum of Art Publications: Titles with full-text online

 [First posted in AWOL 12 October 2012, updated 25 February 2021]

MetPublications
http://www.metmuseum.org/content/img/presentation/icons/header-logo-text.gif

MetPublications is a portal to The Met's comprehensive publishing program with over 1,500 titles, including books, online publications, and Bulletins and Journals from the last five decades.

MetPublications includes a description and table of contents for most titles, as well as information about the authors, reviews, awards, and links to related Met titles by author and by theme. Current book titles that are in-print may be previewed and fully searched online, with a link to purchase the book. The full contents of almost all other book titles may be read online, searched, or downloaded as a PDF. Many of these out-of-print books will be available for purchase, when rights permit, through print-on-demand capabilities in association with Yale University Press. For the Met's Bulletin, all but the most recent issue can be downloaded as a PDF. For the Met's Journal, all individual articles and entire volumes can be downloaded as a PDF.

Readers may also locate works of art from The Met's collection that are included in every book and periodical title and access the most recent information about these works in Collection.

Readers are also directed to every title located in library catalogues on WATSONLINE and WorldCat.

Please check back frequently for updates and new book titles.

MetPublications is made possible by Hunt & Betsy Lawrence.

For questions or to report issues, please contact metpublications@metmuseum.org.

About The Met's Publishing Program

From its founding in 1870, The Metropolitan Museum of Art has published exhibition catalogues, collection catalogues, and guides to the collection. Today it is one of the leading museum publishers in the world, and its award-winning books consistently set the standard for scholarship, production values, and elegant design. Each year, The Met produces about thirty exhibition and collection catalogues and general-audience books, as well as informative periodicals such as the quarterly Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin and the annual Metropolitan Museum Journal.

The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin is a quarterly publication, geared to a general audience, that focuses on works in The Met's collection or exhibitions displayed at the Museum.

The Metropolitan Museum Journal is an annual publication that serves as a forum for the latest scholarly findings about works of art, chiefly in The Met's collection, and related topics.

Since 2000, The Met has developed three online publications focused on its permanent collection: the Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History, with three hundred chronologies, over nine hundred essays, and close to seven thousand works of art written by Museum specialists; Connections, which offers personal perspectives on works in the collection; and 82nd & Fifth, which asks one hundred curators to talk about one hundred works that changed the way they see the world.

The Met's print and online publications program will continue to expand in scope in order to reach the broadest possible audience, thus fulfilling the institution's mission to increase public awareness of and appreciation for art, presenting insightful scholarly discussions and diverse Museum voices on works of art, art history, and especially the Museum's collection and exhibitions.

Antoin Sevruguin: Past and Present

Antoin Sevruguin: Past and Present
Tasha Vorderstrasse, ed.

9781614910541-oimp40-Antoin-Sevruguin.jpg

 

 

 

 

 

 

   


Explore the changing world of late nineteenth-century Iran through the gaze of one of its most renowned photographers, Antoin Sevruguin. This volume, which will be accompanied by a forthcoming exhibition, publishes for the first time the Oriental Institute Museum’s complete collection of nineteenth-century Iranian photographs, most of which were created by Sevruguin. Sevruguin’s artfully staged photographs still resonate with us today. Accompanying the print catalog is a series of essays that investigate Sevruguin’s life and photographic career, including the lasting impact of his unique vision, as demonstrated by the work of contemporary artist Yassaman Ameri.

Table of Contents

Foreword. Christopher Woods
Preface. Jean M. Evans
Acknowledgments. Tasha Vorderstrasse, with Kiersten Neumann
Introduction. Tasha Vorderstrasse
List of Contributors
Timeline
Maps
List of Figures
List of Catalog Images

I.

1. The OI's Collection of Sevruguin Photographs: An Archival Approach. Jeff Cumonow
2. Preservation of the Antoin Sevruguin Collection. Carol Turchan
3. Sevruguin's Approach to Photography. Charissa R. M. Johnson
4. Preserving Iranian Cultural Heritage through Photography. Tasha Vorderstrasse
5. Regarding the One Who is Regarding the Past. Delphine Poinsot
6. To Be or Not To Be an Armenian: (Re-) Identification and Assimilation of Armenian Photographers in the Qajar, Russian, and Ottoman Empires. Tasha Vorderstrasse
7. Antoin Sevruguin in the Context of Russian Culture in the Caucasus. Polina Kasian
8. What Can(not) Be Seen/Unseen: Intentionality in Sevruguin and Beyond. Tasha Vorderstrasse
9. Sevruguin Reimagined: Viewing Sevruguin through a Contemporary Lens. Tasha Vorderstrasse, with Josh Tulisiak
10. Sevruguin and I. Yassaman Ameri

II.
Catalog Introduction. Tasha Vorderstrasse
Catalog

III.
Checklist of the Upcoming Exhibit
Concordance of Museum Registration Numbers
Bibliography
  • Oriental Institute Museum Publications 40
  • Chicago: The Oriental Institute, 2020
  • ISBN-13 (hardback): 978-1-61491-054-1
  • ISBN-13 (eBook): 978-1-61491-057-2
  • Pp. 412 (xliv + 368); 259 figures
  • 11 (w) x 8 (h) in
  • $130


 

Open Access Journal: Phronimon: Journal of the South African Society for Greek Philosophy and the Humanities

[First posted in AWOL 14 October 2013, updated 25 February 2021]

Phronimon: Journal of the South African Society for Greek Philosophy and the Humanities
ISSN: 1561-4018
Volume 19 Number 1
Phronimon publishes original scientifically justifiable contributions (articles, discussions of articles previously published and book reviews) within the field of Philosophy and the Humanities, although contributions within the field of Greek Philosophy and Greek studies will receive priority.  We publish in English, Afrikaans and modern Greek. On submission of the manuscript the author shall present a written undertaking that the article has not been published or is not being presented for publication elsewhere. All articles and review articles will be submitted to national and international referees. Effective and detailed source referencing is of paramount importance. Articles will be scrutinised and checked for bibliographic references and any evidence of proven plagiarism will result in non-publication.
Open Access
Is the philosophy of the Information Systems discipline informed by the arts and humanities?
Published Online: April 9, 2019 | pp. 1–30

 


Göytepe: Neolithic Excavations in the Middle Kura Valley, Azerbaijan


edited by Yoshihiro Nishiaki and Farhad Guliyev. Hardback; 210x297mm; 384 pages; 285 figures, 37 tables (colour throughout). 708 2020. Available both in print and Open Access. Printed ISBN 9781789698787. Epublication ISBN 9781789698794.
Book contents pageDownload Full PDF  
Göytepe: Neolithic Excavations in the Middle Kura Valley, Azerbaijan, publishes the first round of fieldwork and research (2008-2013) at this key site for understanding the emergence and development of food-producing communities in the South Caucasus. Situated close to the Fertile Crescent of Southwest Asia, where Neolithisation processes occurred earlier, research in the South Caucasus raises intriguing research questions, including issues of diffusion from the latter and interaction with ‘incoming’ Neolithic communities as well as the possibility of independent local Neolithisation processes. In order to address these issues in the South Caucasus, a joint Azerbaijan–Japan research programme was launched in 2008 to investigate Göytepe, one of the largest known Neolithic mounds in the South Caucasus. The results of the first phase of the project (2008-2013) presented here provide rich archaeological data from multi-disciplinary perspectives: chronology, architecture, technology, social organisation, and plant and animal exploitation, to name a few. This volume is the first to present these details in a single report of the South Caucasian Neolithic site using a high-resolution chronology based on dozens of radiocarbon dates.

About the Editors
Yoshihiro Nishiaki, who received his BA and MA from the University of Tokyo and PhD from University College London, is a professor of prehistoric archaeology at the University of Tokyo and Director of its University Museum. His research involves the prehistory of Southwest Asia and its neighbouring regions through fieldwork and archaeological analyses of material remains. He has directed a number of field campaigns at Palaeolithic and Neolithic sites in Syria, Iran, Azerbaijan, and Uzbekistan. The Neolithisation processes of the South Caucasus have been a major target of his research in the past few decades. ;

Farhad Guliyev, a graduate of the Baku State University of the Republic of Azerbaijan, received his PhD from the Azerbaijan National Academy of Sciences (ANAS) and currently serves as Director of the Museum of the Institute of Archaeology and Ethnography, ANAS. His major research interests lie in the socio-economic development of the South Caucasus from the Neolithic to the Bronze Age. His recent international field projects besides Göytepe include the Neolithic sites of Hacı Elamxanlıtepe, Menteshtepe and Kiciktepe, also in western Azerbaijan.


View Reviews

Download Full PDF  
Open Access users: by downloading this eBook you are agreeing to our standard terms and conditions available here.
Institutional subscribers: by downloading this eBook you are agreeing to abide by the subscription licence issued to The Institution. Contact your library for further details. If you encounter any issues with your download please contact info@archaeopress.com 


Archäologie und Politik: Die zwei Geschichten des Tropaeum Traiani zwischen Heidelberg und Adamklissi

Polly Lohmann (Hrsg.)

  Archäologie und Politik

Wem gehört kulturelles Erbe, und was erzählt es uns? Diese hochaktuellen Fragen sind Teil eines Spannungsfeldes zwischen Besitzansprüchen und Geschichtskonstruktionen, für das die Archäologie immer wieder herhalten muss. Das Tropaeum Traiani von Adamklissi in Rumänien steht beispielhaft für die historischen Verflechtungen von Archäologie und Politik. Die Pop-up-Ausstellung und dieses Buch erzählen die zwei Geschichten desselben Monuments, das – als Original in Rumänien und als Kopie in Heidelberg – im Verlauf des 20. Jahrhunderts ganz unterschiedlich rezipiert und politisch instrumentalisiert wurde. Mit der Archäologie im Ersten Weltkrieg, der Antikenrezeption im kommunistischen Rumänien und der 1968er-Bewegung in Deutschland werden schlaglichtartig verschiedene politische Kontexte und ihre Auswirkungen auf das kulturelle Erbe der Antike gezeigt.

Inhaltsverzeichnis
PDF
Titelei
Inhalt / Cuprins / Contents
Polly Lohmann
Hintergrund, Umsetzung und Problematiken einer Ausstellung der etwas anderen Art / Fundal, implementare și problematicile unei expoziții de alt gen / Motives, Implementation, and Problems of an Exhibition of a Different Kind
Christian Witschel
Kaiser Trajan, die Dakerkriege und die Donauprovinzen / Împăratul Traian, războaiele dacice și provinciile dunărene / Emperor Trajan, the Dacian Wars and the Danube Provinces
Alexandru Barnea, Polly Lohmann
Architektur und Bildprogramm des Tropaeum Traiani / Arhitectura și imaginile sculptate de pe monumentul Tropaeum Traiani / Architecture and Images of the Tropaeum Traiani
Robert Born
Deutsche Archäologie in Rumänien vor und während der Besatzungszeit (1916–1918) / Arheologia germană în România înainte și în timpul ocupației (1916–1918) / German Archaeology in Romania before and during the Occupation (1916 to 1918)
Polly Lohmann
Die Abgüsse des Tropaeum Traiani in der Heidelberger Antikensammlung / Mulajele monumentului Tropaeum Traiani din Colecția de Antichități din Heidelberg / The Plaster Casts of the Tropaeum Traiani in the Heidelberg Collection of Classical Antiquities
Adriana Panaite, Alexandru Barnea
Das Tropaeum Traiani von Adamklissi im 20. Jahrhundert / Tropaeum Traiani de la Adamclisi în secolul al XX‑lea / The Tropaeum Traiani at Adamclisi in the 20th Century
Adriana Panaite
Nachruf / Necrolog / Obituary
Weiterführende Literatur / Lecturi suplimentare / Further Reading
Archäologie, Antikenrezeption und das Tropaeum Traiani / Arheologie, receptarea antichității și monumentul Tropaeum Traiani / Archaeology, Reception of Antiquity and the Tropaeum Traiani
Glossar / Glosar / Glossary
Lizenz

Dieses Werk ist unter der Creative Commons Licenz 4.0
(CC BY-NC- ND 4.0)
veröffentlicht.
Creative Commons Lizenz CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0

Identifikatoren
ISBN 978-3-948465-94-0 (PDF)

Veröffentlicht am 03.02.2021.

Wednesday, February 24, 2021

Network for the Study of Archaic and Classical Greek Song

[First posted in AWOL 27 October 2010, updated 24 February 2021]

Network for the Study of Archaic and Classical Greek Song
https://sites.rutgers.edu/greeksong/wp-content/uploads/sites/283/2019/09/20217501_1345891637_JAVC6860-Delphi-in-the-Morning.jpg

Welcome to the website of the Network for the Study of Archaic and Classical Greek Song. The Network was founded in 2007 at the initiative of Ewen Bowie (University of Oxford) and André Lardinois (Radboud University Nijmegen) with the aim of promoting the exchange of information and ideas between scholars engaged in the study of archaic and classical lyric, elegiac and iambic poetry.

Today, it is overseen by Lucia Athanassaki (University of Crete) and Timothy Power (Rutgers University), who act as the Network’s choragoi, and its principal activity is the organisation of annual conferences on themes identified as key to advancement of the field by an international team of core members or choreutai.

Additionally, this website hosts a Bibliography of scholarship on Greek song published by its members and additional resources from around the web.

The Nahrein Network: New Ancient History Research for Education in Iraq and its Neighbours

 [First posted in AWOL 27 October 2017, updated 24 February 2021]

The Nahrein Network fosters the sustainable development of antiquity, cultural heritage and the humanities in Iraq and its neighbours. We support interdisciplinary research to enable universities, museums, and community groups to better serve local, post-conflict needs.

The Network is based at University College London, Sulaimani Polytechnic University, Al-Qadisiyah University, and the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford. It also has many international partners. We are funded for four years, 2017-21, by the UK Arts and Humanities Research Council and the Global Challenges Research Fund Network Plus scheme.