>
The Imagery of the Athenian Symposium

The Imagery of the Athenian Symposium

  • £55.99
  • Save £29


Kathryn Topper
Cambridge University Press
Edition: Illustrated, 1/17/2013
EAN 9781107011021, ISBN10: 1107011027

Hardcover, 233 pages, 26.7 x 19 x 2.5 cm
Language: English
Originally published in English

The late sixth and early fifth centuries BC were a dynamic time in the history of the symposium, and hundreds of vase paintings from this period show people engaged in sympotic activities. Most scholars have understood these images as illustrations of contemporary Athenian practices, but such an interpretation cannot account for the enormous variety of settings, costumes and participants in the images, nor is it easily reconciled with recent methodological developments in the study of vase painting. Noting the close link between the symposium and the polis in ancient thought, this book approaches the images not as documents of contemporary sympotic practice but as vehicles for exploring what it meant to be a Greek community. It argues that many of the images depict imagined ancestral symposia and that they thus shed new light on how the Athenians envisioned the history of the symposium and its importance to their city.

Introduction
vase painting and the symposium in Athens
1. Ancient visions of the sympotic past
2. Symposia of the primitive
3. Eros, service, and the oinochoos
4. The symposium and its foreign pasts
5. Female symposiasts and the limits of civilization
6. Symposia of the present?
Conclusion
vase painting and the construction of the sympotic past.