
In the last twenty years, reception studies have significantly enhanced our understanding of the ways in which Classics has shaped modern Western culture, but very little attention has been directed toward the reception of classical architecture. Housing the New Romans: Architectual Reception and Classical Style in the Modern World addresses this gap by investigating ways in which appropriation and allusion facilitated the reception of Classical Greece and Rome through the requisition and redeployment of classicizing tropes to create neo-Antique sites of "dwelling" in the 19th and early 20th centuries. The volume, across nine essays, will cover both European and American iterations of place making, including Sir John Soanes' house in London, the Hôtel de Beauharnais in Paris, and the Getty Villa in California. By focusing on structures and places that are oriented towards private life-houses, hotels, clubs, tombs, and gardens-the volume directs the critical gaze towards diverse and complex sites of curatorial self-fashioning. The goal of the volume is to provide a multiplicity of interpretative frameworks (e.g. object-agency enchantment, hyperreality, memory-infrastructure) that may be applied to the study of architectural reception. This critical approach makes Housing the New Romans the first work of its kind in the emerging field of architectural and landscape reception studies and in the hitherto textually dominated field of classical reception.
This volume investigates how the appropriation and redeployment of classical architectural tropes shaped private domestic spaces in the 19th and early 20th centuries. Elizabeth Macaulay-Lewis and Katharine T. von Stackelberg, both scholars of classical antiquity and material culture, curate a collection of nine essays that analyze how individuals used neo-Antique styles to construct identities within their homes, gardens, and private clubs. The authors argue that these sites of dwelling serve as critical, under-examined evidence of how classical reception influenced modern Western cultural self-fashioning.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts identify this work as a foundational text for the emerging field of architectural and landscape reception studies. Scholars note that it successfully shifts the focus of classical reception away from textual analysis toward the material reality of the built environment.
Page Count:
352
Publication Date:
2017-07-03
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190272333
ISBN-13:
9780190272333
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