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E-raamat: Monumental [Taylor & Francis e-raamat]

Edited by (Hellenic Open University, Greece)
  • Formaat: 260 pages, 1 Line drawings, black and white; 56 Halftones, black and white; 57 Illustrations, black and white
  • Sari: Routledge Studies in Urbanism and the City
  • Ilmumisaeg: 14-Mar-2025
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-13: 9781003519683
  • Taylor & Francis e-raamat
  • Hind: 161,57 €*
  • * hind, mis tagab piiramatu üheaegsete kasutajate arvuga ligipääsu piiramatuks ajaks
  • Tavahind: 230,81 €
  • Säästad 30%
  • Formaat: 260 pages, 1 Line drawings, black and white; 56 Halftones, black and white; 57 Illustrations, black and white
  • Sari: Routledge Studies in Urbanism and the City
  • Ilmumisaeg: 14-Mar-2025
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-13: 9781003519683
"The Monumental is an interdisciplinary collection of original, cutting-edge contributions by international researchers pursuing the epistemology and ontology of monuments over time and geography. The contributors are specialists in geography, architectural theory and history, prehistoric, Greek and Roman archaeology, modern art, Byzantine studies, landscape theory and heritage reception. Against the global climate of flux and uncertainty in the present turbulent world, the durability of monuments as "urban permanences" emerges as one of the few remaining spatial and mental anchorages. As such it is needed, maintained, enhanced, imitated, landscaped and even invented. In particular, the monumental as a spatial and aesthetic phenomenon of perpetual importance has recently acquired major new meanings. It now emerges as a key political, spatial, aesthetic, symbolic, architectural and archaeological manifestation or entity, open to constantly new, even contradictory forms and expressions. This collection addresses the urgent need for relevant research. It breaks new ground by posing fresh questions on the ontology, temporality, purpose, politics, scale, place, contestations and aesthetics of and around the monumental, from prehistoric time to the present, aswell as in both Eastern and Western geographies. Monuments are explored as bearers of the urban majestic, extraordinary and sublime. The Monumental poses questions about changing perceptions, the evocative power of representation, identity construction, ideology and symbolism, the vital necessity for a communicative and active public space around monuments, imitation processes across geographical space-time, as well as the powers that construct, deconstruct or identify the monumental but also the anti-monumental as such. Geographies of reference are the European space, the United States and Asia. Wide-ranging theorizations alternate with in-depth analyses of paradigmatic cases. Conventional as well as alternative forms of the monumental in the present shifting world are also pursued. The Monumental is of great value and interest to scholars, students and professionals in the fields of architectural theory, history and design, archaeology, art theory and history, Byzantine studies, restoration, urban design and planning, human, urban and cultural geography, cultural studies, social anthropology, Asian studies, as well as those in wider subdisciplines"--

The Monumental is an interdisciplinary collection of original, cutting-edge contributions by international researchers pursuing the epistemology and ontology of monuments over time and geography.



The Monumental is an interdisciplinary collection of original, cutting-edge contributions by international researchers pursuing the epistemology and ontology of monuments over time and geography. The contributors are specialists in geography, architectural theory and history, prehistoric, Greek and Roman archaeology, modern art, Byzantine studies, landscape theory and heritage reception. Against the global climate of flux and uncertainty in the present turbulent world, the durability of monuments as “urban permanences” emerges as one of the few remaining spatial and mental anchorages. As such it is needed, maintained, enhanced, imitated, landscaped and even invented. In particular, the monumental as a spatial and aesthetic phenomenon of perpetual importance has recently acquired major new meanings. It now emerges as a key political, spatial, aesthetic, symbolic, architectural and archaeological manifestation or entity, open to constantly new, even contradictory forms and expressions.

This collection addresses the urgent need for relevant research. It breaks new ground by posing fresh questions on the ontology, temporality, purpose, politics, scale, place, contestations and aesthetics of and around the monumental, from prehistoric time to the present, as well as in both Eastern and Western geographies. Monuments are explored as bearers of the urban majestic, extraordinary and sublime. The Monumental poses questions about changing perceptions, the evocative power of representation, identity construction, ideology and symbolism, the vital necessity for a communicative and active public space around monuments, imitation processes across geographical space-time, as well as the powers that construct, deconstruct or identify the monumental but also the anti-monumental as such. Geographies of reference are the European space, the United States and Asia. Wide-ranging theorizations alternate with in-depth analyses of paradigmatic cases. Conventional as well as alternative forms of the monumental in the present shifting world are also pursued.

The Monumental is of great value and interest to scholars, students and professionals in the fields of architectural theory, history and design, archaeology, art theory and history, Byzantine studies, restoration, urban design and planning, human, urban and cultural geography, cultural studies, social anthropology, Asian studies, as well as those in wider subdisciplines.

List of figuresList of contributorsAcknowledgments

Introduction: Towards an ontology and epistemology of the monumental

ARGYRO LOUKAKI

PART IThe Mediterranean as source of monumentality and sublimity from
prehistory to the present

1 The monumentalization of Mycenaean architecture after 1200 BCE
MANOLIS MIKRAKIS

2 Monumentality as a form of societal expression: The case of Naxiwn Polis in
the Archaic period
ALEXANDRA S. SFYROERA

3 Shaping the ancient urban landscape: Monumentality in the cities of Roman
Greece
VASILIS EVANGELIDIS

4 Hagia Sophia, monumentality, and the world stage
ROBERT G. OUSTERHOUT

5 The perception of monuments in Late Byzantium and beyond: Representations
of donors holding a church model
DIONYSIOS MOURELATOS

6 The other monument: From monumentality to mnemonicality
KONSTANTINOS I. SOUEREF

PART IIModern and ultramodern dialogues with Classical monumentality:
Exaltations, antagonisms, disputes, retractions

7 Political monuments as references to the idealized ancient landscape
KONSTANTINOS MORAITIS

8 Building modern sacred geographies: The subtle monumental of Dimitris
Pikionis
ARGYRO LOUKAKI

9 Monumentalizing historical time: Body, nation, and utopia in 20th-century
Greece
DIMITRIS PLANTZOS

PART IIIThe Eastern and Western monumental from antiquity to the present

10 The East-West divide, the Eastern monumental and Greek classicism: The
case of China and India
ARGYRO LOUKAKI

11 On the monumental MANOLIS KORRES

12 Architecture of magnificence: Monumental tendencies in mid-18th-century
architectural discourse
FELIX MARTIN

13 A particular kind of monumentality in the work of Mark Rothko
KALLIOPI KOUNDOURI

14 Postwar social housing: the (anti)monumentality of Georges Candilis
KORINNA ZINOVIA WEBER

15 Monumentality, skyscrapers, and being human
GORDANA KOROLIJA FONTANA-GIUSTI

PART IV
Bridging the European center with the Mediterranean periphery:
19th21st-century artistic and architectural links

16 Monumentality, poetry, and memory: Eugène Delacroixs The Death of
Sardanapalus and Yannoulis Halepass Sleeping LadyMELITA EMMANOUIL

17 Monumentality and the Great National Donors in Greek cityscapes:
Phantasmagoria in the midst of crises
LILA LEONTIDOU

Concluding thoughtsARGYRO LOUKAKI

Index
Argyro Loukaki is Professor Emerita at the Hellenic Open University (HOU). She has a DPhil from Oxford University, an MSc in Architectural Engineering from NTUA, an MA from Sussex University, and an MSc from Panteion University. She has obtained doctoral/postdoctoral fellowships and prizes from the Greek State Scholarship Foundation and universities including Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, NTUA, and the universities of Oxford and Princeton. Loukaki created the Masters Program Art-Cultural Heritage-Development Policies and launched bi-annual international conferences on art and/in space held at the Acropolis Museum. Earlier, she accomplished urban planning, architectural design and monuments preservation projects as a functionary of the Greek state, including archaeological landscaping and restoration, and was Planning Advisor to the City of Piraeus. She has authored 11 books plus many articles and monographs in English and Greek on art, architecture and space, cultural heritage, restoration and its aesthetics, Mediterranean cultural geography and the geographical unconscious, tourism, landscape, and the spatialities of Classical Greek tragedy. The Monumental is the fourth by Routledge. Previous books by Routledge include: Living Ruins, Value Conflicts; The Geographical Unconscious; Urban Art and the City: Creating, Destroying, and Reclaiming the Sublime.