website templates
Ordinary Made Extraordinary

[ePub] Ordinary Made Extraordinary by Pascal Anson at Arts-Photography

Description

This new translation of The Bacchaemdash;that strange blend of Aeschylean grandeur and Euripidean finessemdash;is an attempt to reproduce for the American stage the play as it most probably was when new and unmutilated in 406 B.C. The achievement of this aim involves a restoration of the "great lacuna" at the climax and the discovery of several primary stage effects very likely intended by Euripides. These effects and controversial questions of the composition and stylistics are discussed in the notes and the accompanying essay.


#1960122 in eBooks 2014-10-09 2014-10-09File Name: B00O30HG28


Review
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful. A more balanced view of the origins of prehistoric rock artBy MarilynP.G. Bahn marshals facts ... and facts ... and facts to support his interpretation of the origins of prehistoric rock art ---something that the promoters of the shamanic-origin opinion do not do. [The questioning of this controversial theory(the shamanic-theory) seems to be a major aim of Bahns book]. While it is attractive and appealing to say thatrock art originated because of the activities of shamans who controlled the mind-world ; such a view is both trendy;and in need of analysis. It is highly questionable that ALL rock art had only ONE origin:petroglyphs geoglyphs were created in many geographical places; and over a wide time-frame.The scope is enormous. Therefore; I support the critical attitude that Bahn has taken: Bahn leaves the very important impression that one-interpretation-does NOT-fit-all-cases.10 of 11 people found the following review helpful. Pointless polemicBy Timothy MasonBahn disagrees with the shamanic interpretation of rock art. However; this reader found that by the time he had waded through chapter 4; which is devoted to a hatchet job on Lewis-Williams; Whitley and Clottes; he had considerable sympathy for their point of view. There is a great deal of aggressive hand-waving; amongst which the substance - and there is substance to Bahns argument - gets lost. Having now also read Whitleys book; and losing most of the sympathy that reading Bahn had gained for him; I get the impression that specialists in Prehistoric Art are not skilled at presenting their case in book form. If you can access the original papers; through JSTOR; for example; then I recommend doing so. An interesting and critical review of Lewis-Williams can be found in Current Anthropology Vol. 41; No. 5 (December 2000); pp. 866-873; written by Derek Hodgson of the University of York (UK)11 of 15 people found the following review helpful. Rock Art Through a Skewed LensBy Clifton SniderI know Bahns work through such beautifully written and illustrated books as "Journey Through the Ice Age" (with Jean Vertut) and "The Cambridge Illustrated History of Prehistoric Art;" both of which I read after visiting the Cave of Niaux in 1999; along with just about every other book on the topic of Europes Ice Age art I could get my hands on.My interest in rock art; albeit an amateur interest; began in 1984 when I first viewed petroglyphs in New Mexico near the Rio Grande. My approach to the topic is that of a poet; and has produced a poem on Niaux (translated twice into French) and; more recently; the Cave of Pech-Merle. So I enthusiastically ordered the hardcover copy of Bahns new book; "Prehistoric Rock Art: Polemics and Progress."My disappointment began with the fact the book had no dust jacket; unlike Bahns previous book also published by Cambridge UP. The subsidiary from whom I ordered the book claims university presses dont usually publish with dust jackets. I have not found this to be true. A small point; perhaps; but if youre interested in art; you want as many illustrations as possible. The new book has lots of black and white photos; most are of poor quality; particularly measured against the splendid photos; both black and white and in color; of the other Bahn books I read (and own). Bahn says the lectures upon which he bases his book "were picture-led and heavily illustrated; whereas in the written format the emphasis must be on text" (Introduction). This is disappointing; especially considering the not inexpensive price of the hardcover edition.Apart from his notorious and unscholarly exclamation marks (irritating in the extreme); Bahn is very readable. His prose style; apart from the exclamation marks; does not disappoint. He makes the subject interesting. I do not understand; however; why he spends two long chapters refuting the theory that much of the art stems from shamanism; a topic he has covered before and which even his favorite targets; Jean Clottes and David Lewis-Williams; admit does not account for all rock art. Bahns objections are so strongly put one suspects something personal is behind it (though I have no way of supporting my opinion other than a gut feeling). Surely if the topic of shamanism deserves so much space (roughly a third of the book); then Andreacute; Leroi-Gourhans absurd structuralist and neo-Freudian theories deserve more attention. The former theory is barely mentioned; the latter not at all (although Bahn touches on it in a previous book).If we are going to call rock art "art;" I think it a mistake also to say "the only person who can really tell us what a particular image or set of images in rock art means is the artist himself or herself" (Introduction). True; knowing the intentions of the original artists would be immensely helpful; but if the art clearly means something (e.g. that the image is a bison with a red arrow-like projectile) then we can say that and interpret it as we will in its context; by which I mean both its location and its media. Bahn has committed what the New Critics used to call the Intentional Fallacy. No artist has the final say on what his/her work means if it is truly art.Nevertheless; Im glad to see that Bahn believes the art often represents mythology and perhaps ritual (such as initiation); as well as humor and many other possibilities. What he brings to the subject is an encyclopedic knowledge of rock art from around the world. I would like more on the "progress" in the subtitle and less of the "polemics."

© Copyright 2020 Online Book Gallery. All Rights Reserved.