Front cover image for The ancient Mediterranean Sea in modern visual and performing arts : sailing in troubled waters

The ancient Mediterranean Sea in modern visual and performing arts : sailing in troubled waters

When thinking about the Mediterranean, Fernand Braudel's haunting words resound like an echo of the sea and its millenary history. From Prehistory until today, the Mediterranean has been setting, witness and protagonist of mythical and supernatural adventures, of encounters with the Other, of legendary and historical battles, of the rise and fall of cultures and empires, of fortunate and tragic destinies of humans. Braudel's appeal for a long duree history of the Mediterranean challenged traditional views that often present it as a sea fragmented and divided through epochs and periods. This volume proposes a journey into the bright but also dark sides of the ancient Mediterranean through the kaleidoscopic gaze of artists who from the Renaissance to the 21st century have been inspired and fascinated by the sea, its myths and history. The view of those who imagined and recreated the past of the sea has largely contributed to the shaping of modern cultures which - close to its shores or not - are inexorably rooted and embedded in Mediterranean traditions. The contributions look at modern visual reinterpretations of ancient myths, fiction and history and pay particular attention to the theme of sea travel and travellers, which since Homer's Odyssey has become the epitome of the discovery of new worlds but also of cultural exchanges and a metaphor of personal developments and metamorphoses
eBook, English, 2018
Bloomsbury Academic, An imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing Plc, London, UK, 2018
Congress
1 online resource (xiv, 325 pages)
9781474298605, 9781474298612, 1474298605, 1474298613
1012107577
The Mediterranean as a geographical space
Living and dying in troubled waters
A personal Sea. The artist and the Sea
Sea politics
Contemporary uses of the classical Mediterranean
Outgrowth of the conference Sailing in troubled waters, Faro, October 2014