Bøger af Jane Hjarl Petersen
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- Aspects of Life and Death in Ancient Families
398,95 kr. I dette rigt illustrerede bind undersøges familien og dens mange konstellationer i både den private og den offentlige sfære i antikkens græske og romerske samfund. Forfatterne anskuer emnet fra forskelligesynsvinkler – fx religion, social status, alder og køn – og belyser en bred vifte af aspekter, der har med familien at gøre: familiens rolle i oikos/domus, teaterforestillinger og begravelsessammenhænge; hvordan familien afspejles i votivpraksisser, politisk propaganda og i den romerske flåde; og hvordan kønsroller manifesterer sig både offentligt og privat.Family Lives dækker geografisk og kulturelt bredt i Middelhavsområdet i antikken.Dette bind er resultatet af det tværfaglige seminar Families in the Ancient World, afholdt af Collegium Hyperboreum i november 2015.
- Bog
- 398,95 kr.
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- Burial Customs in the Northern Black Sea Area c. 550-270 BC
369,95 kr. - Bog
- 369,95 kr.
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- Between Conflicts and Coexistence
183,95 kr. Meetings of cultures arouse strong feelings. In this volume, nineteen scholars from Denmark, France, Georgia, Great Britain, the Netherlands, Russia, and Ukraine present a profound discussion covering various topics from the physical arena of the colonial encounters, to the layout of land and protection of cities, to the dynamics of the cultural exchange, to the perception of how it was to be Greek in the Pontic realm, and finally, to be reciprocal strategies exerted by the Greeks and Scythians in the Olbia as described in Herodotos's Skythian Tale. Through the many-sided contributions it is revealed how the self and the other are two sides of the same coin - yeasterday, today, and tomorrow.
- E-bog
- 183,95 kr.
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- Burial Customs in the Northern Black Sea Area c. 550-270 BC
182,95 kr. In Antiquity the Black Sea region was a meeting point for several different population groups with diverse cultural backgrounds. The present monograph takes its point of departure in burial data from four coastal localities in the northern region of the Black Sea. The mortuary practices are decoded and interpreted within a framework mainly based on concepts of cultural interaction rather than cultural polarisation. Thus, the dogma of 'The Greeks and the Others' is challenged, and alternative perceptions of interactions between the people in the Black Sea region form the basis of the study. The burials are primarily analysed with emphasis on social strategies and cultural diversity. Furthermore, the Black Sea region is set into a comparative perspective through an outlook on burial customs and mortuary practices in the colonial milieus of contemporary Southern Italy.
- E-bog
- 182,95 kr.