NELC523 - Narrative in Ancient Art

Status
O
Activity
SEM
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Narrative in Ancient Art
Term
2020C
Syllabus URL
Subject area
NELC
Section number only
401
Section ID
NELC523401
Course number integer
523
Registration notes
Crse Online: Sync & Async Components
Meeting times
T 04:30 PM-07:30 PM
Level
graduate
Instructors
Holly Pittman
Ann L Kuttner
Description
Art history, and its cousins in religious, social, political and literary studies, have long been fascinated with the question of narrative: how do images engage time, tell stories? These are fundamental questions for ancient Near Eastern, Egyptian and Mediterranean art history and archaeology, whose rich corpus of narrative images is rarely considered in the context of "Western" art. Relations between words and things, texts and images, were as fundamental to the ancient cultures we examine as they are to modern studies. As we weigh classic modern descriptions of narrative and narratology, we will bring to bear recent debates about how (ancient) images, things, monuments, and designed spaces engage with time, space, and event, and interact with cultural memory. We will ask "who is the story for, and why?" for public and private narratives ranging from political histories to mythological encounters. Our case studies will be drawn from the instructors' expertise in Mesopotamian visual culture, and in the visual cultures of the larger Mediterranean world from early Greek antiquity to the Hellenistic, Roman, and Late Antique periods. One central and comparative question, for instance, is the nature of recording history in pictures and texts in the imperial projects of Assyria, Achaemenid Persia, the Hellenistic kingdoms, and Rome.
Course number only
523
Cross listings
ARTH523401, AAMW523401, CLST523401
Use local description
No