Faces of the Encounter: Greco-Egyptian Interaction in the Royal Sculpture of the Ptolemaic Period

Detalhes bibliográficos
Autor(a) principal: Miranda, Catarina Bernardes Neves
Data de Publicação: 2020
Tipo de documento: Dissertação
Idioma: eng
Título da fonte: Repositório Científico de Acesso Aberto de Portugal (Repositórios Cientìficos)
Texto Completo: http://hdl.handle.net/10362/99796
Resumo: Postcolonial studies have been interested and especially productive in the study of material culture. Postcolonial theory remained, nevertheless, an inadequate explanatory framework for cases where change was neither in its nature nor structure necessarily promoted by the configurations of power relations (colonial or others). This is possibly the case of the change that occurred in royal statuary during the Ptolemaic period. Around the time the postcolonial paradigm was establishing in the Humanities, so too was the Ptolemaic period receiving growing attention. Scholars studying this chronology, during the second half of the twentieth century, however, understood Egypt’s society and culture as a set of impermeable communities/ traditions, coexisting with one another. This interpretation caused a radical turn in the historiography of the period, and left material culture that did not belong exclusively to neither one of the main cultural sets (Greek or Egyptian) largely overlooked, and, later on, underestimated in the debates about interaction. This dissertation takes as a case study the Greco-Egyptian stone sculpture in the round of the male Ptolemaic rulers, looking to further understand these previously underestimated objects. They were not underestimated, however, in the sense that their existence was not acknowledged or analysed, but in the sense that the explanation put forward was not complex enough, nor representative. The authors formulated their interpretations mainly from the point of view of state and elites, outshadowing, thus, other possible realms of agency. The present investigation seeks to propose a different theoretical framework to interpret the existence of Greco-Egyptian statuary of Ptolemaic rulers. Although Ptolemaic Egypt is not understood today as a colonial case, postcolonial studies contributed to this alternative line of interpretation by inspiring a decentralization of the analysis, from the state to other groups. Nevertheless, the major contribution will come from an operational concept – “intericonicity” – and a theory of consumption - taken from material culture studies -, which decentralize the approach, from issues of power to other processes (also) underlying change and interaction.
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spelling Faces of the Encounter: Greco-Egyptian Interaction in the Royal Sculpture of the Ptolemaic PeriodPtolemaic EgyptRoyal Ptolemaic stone sculpture in the roundGreco- Egyptian statuesMaterial CultureCulture ContactIntericonicityConsumption studiesEgipto ptolemaicoEscultura real ptolemaica em pedraEstátuas greco-egípciasCultura materialContacto culturalIntericonicidadeEstudos sobre consumoDomínio/Área Científica::Humanidades::História e ArqueologiaPostcolonial studies have been interested and especially productive in the study of material culture. Postcolonial theory remained, nevertheless, an inadequate explanatory framework for cases where change was neither in its nature nor structure necessarily promoted by the configurations of power relations (colonial or others). This is possibly the case of the change that occurred in royal statuary during the Ptolemaic period. Around the time the postcolonial paradigm was establishing in the Humanities, so too was the Ptolemaic period receiving growing attention. Scholars studying this chronology, during the second half of the twentieth century, however, understood Egypt’s society and culture as a set of impermeable communities/ traditions, coexisting with one another. This interpretation caused a radical turn in the historiography of the period, and left material culture that did not belong exclusively to neither one of the main cultural sets (Greek or Egyptian) largely overlooked, and, later on, underestimated in the debates about interaction. This dissertation takes as a case study the Greco-Egyptian stone sculpture in the round of the male Ptolemaic rulers, looking to further understand these previously underestimated objects. They were not underestimated, however, in the sense that their existence was not acknowledged or analysed, but in the sense that the explanation put forward was not complex enough, nor representative. The authors formulated their interpretations mainly from the point of view of state and elites, outshadowing, thus, other possible realms of agency. The present investigation seeks to propose a different theoretical framework to interpret the existence of Greco-Egyptian statuary of Ptolemaic rulers. Although Ptolemaic Egypt is not understood today as a colonial case, postcolonial studies contributed to this alternative line of interpretation by inspiring a decentralization of the analysis, from the state to other groups. Nevertheless, the major contribution will come from an operational concept – “intericonicity” – and a theory of consumption - taken from material culture studies -, which decentralize the approach, from issues of power to other processes (also) underlying change and interaction.Os estudos pós-coloniais têm-se dedicado muito particularmente a cultura material e aos seus processos de mudança, e têm-se revelado produtivos a esse respeito. Esta teoria permaneceu, no entanto, uma estrutura explicativa inadequada para casos em que a mudança não parece ter uma natureza ou estrutura necessariamente promovida por relações de poder (coloniais ou outras). Esse é possivelmente o caso da mudança ocorrida na estatuária real do período ptolemaico. Na época em que o paradigma pós-colonial se estabelecia nas Humanidades, o período ptolemaico também recebia crescente atenção. Os estudos sobre essa cronologia, durante a segunda metade do século XX, contudo, entendiam a sociedade e a cultura ptolemaicas como um agregado de comunidades/ tradições em grande medida impermeáveis, coexistindo apenas entre si. Essa interpretação causou uma alteração radical na historiografia sobre o período e deixou a cultura material que não pertencia exclusivamente a nenhum dos principais conjuntos culturais (grego ou egípcio) largamente ignorada e, mais tarde, subestimada nos debates acerca da interacção. Esta dissertação tomou como estudo de caso a escultura em pedra grecoegípcia dos governantes ptolemaicos masculinos, procurando entender melhor esses objectos anteriormente subestimados. Estes objectos não foram, contudo, subestimados no sentido de que a sua existência não foi reconhecida ou analisada, mas sim no sentido de que a explicação apresentada não se revelava suficientemente complexa, ou representativa. Os estudos apresentavam uma interpretação elaborada principalmente do ponto de vista do Estado ptolemaico e das elites, desconsiderando assim outros possíveis domínios de agência. A presente investigação procura por isso propor um enquadramento teórico diferente para interpretar a existência da estatuária greco-egípcia dos governantes ptolemaicos. Ainda que hoje o Egipto ptolemaico não seja entendido como um caso colonial, os estudos pós-coloniais contribuirão para esta linha de interpretação alternativa ao inspirar um descentramento da análise, do Estado para outros grupos. A contribuição maior virá, não obstante, de um conceito operativo – “intericonicidade” – e de uma teoria do consumo - do âmbito de estudos em cultura material -, que descentralizam assim a abordagem, de questões de poder para outros processos que (também) subjazem a mudança e a interacção.Lopes, Maria Helena TrindadeRUNMiranda, Catarina Bernardes Neves2023-04-02T00:30:31Z2020-04-022020-06-232020-04-02T00:00:00Zinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersioninfo:eu-repo/semantics/masterThesisapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/10362/99796TID:202481972enginfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessreponame:Repositório Científico de Acesso Aberto de Portugal (Repositórios Cientìficos)instname:Agência para a Sociedade do Conhecimento (UMIC) - FCT - Sociedade da Informaçãoinstacron:RCAAP2024-03-11T04:46:32Zoai:run.unl.pt:10362/99796Portal AgregadorONGhttps://www.rcaap.pt/oai/openaireopendoar:71602024-03-20T03:39:15.178776Repositório Científico de Acesso Aberto de Portugal (Repositórios Cientìficos) - Agência para a Sociedade do Conhecimento (UMIC) - FCT - Sociedade da Informaçãofalse
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv Faces of the Encounter: Greco-Egyptian Interaction in the Royal Sculpture of the Ptolemaic Period
title Faces of the Encounter: Greco-Egyptian Interaction in the Royal Sculpture of the Ptolemaic Period
spellingShingle Faces of the Encounter: Greco-Egyptian Interaction in the Royal Sculpture of the Ptolemaic Period
Miranda, Catarina Bernardes Neves
Ptolemaic Egypt
Royal Ptolemaic stone sculpture in the round
Greco- Egyptian statues
Material Culture
Culture Contact
Intericonicity
Consumption studies
Egipto ptolemaico
Escultura real ptolemaica em pedra
Estátuas greco-egípcias
Cultura material
Contacto cultural
Intericonicidade
Estudos sobre consumo
Domínio/Área Científica::Humanidades::História e Arqueologia
title_short Faces of the Encounter: Greco-Egyptian Interaction in the Royal Sculpture of the Ptolemaic Period
title_full Faces of the Encounter: Greco-Egyptian Interaction in the Royal Sculpture of the Ptolemaic Period
title_fullStr Faces of the Encounter: Greco-Egyptian Interaction in the Royal Sculpture of the Ptolemaic Period
title_full_unstemmed Faces of the Encounter: Greco-Egyptian Interaction in the Royal Sculpture of the Ptolemaic Period
title_sort Faces of the Encounter: Greco-Egyptian Interaction in the Royal Sculpture of the Ptolemaic Period
author Miranda, Catarina Bernardes Neves
author_facet Miranda, Catarina Bernardes Neves
author_role author
dc.contributor.none.fl_str_mv Lopes, Maria Helena Trindade
RUN
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv Miranda, Catarina Bernardes Neves
dc.subject.por.fl_str_mv Ptolemaic Egypt
Royal Ptolemaic stone sculpture in the round
Greco- Egyptian statues
Material Culture
Culture Contact
Intericonicity
Consumption studies
Egipto ptolemaico
Escultura real ptolemaica em pedra
Estátuas greco-egípcias
Cultura material
Contacto cultural
Intericonicidade
Estudos sobre consumo
Domínio/Área Científica::Humanidades::História e Arqueologia
topic Ptolemaic Egypt
Royal Ptolemaic stone sculpture in the round
Greco- Egyptian statues
Material Culture
Culture Contact
Intericonicity
Consumption studies
Egipto ptolemaico
Escultura real ptolemaica em pedra
Estátuas greco-egípcias
Cultura material
Contacto cultural
Intericonicidade
Estudos sobre consumo
Domínio/Área Científica::Humanidades::História e Arqueologia
description Postcolonial studies have been interested and especially productive in the study of material culture. Postcolonial theory remained, nevertheless, an inadequate explanatory framework for cases where change was neither in its nature nor structure necessarily promoted by the configurations of power relations (colonial or others). This is possibly the case of the change that occurred in royal statuary during the Ptolemaic period. Around the time the postcolonial paradigm was establishing in the Humanities, so too was the Ptolemaic period receiving growing attention. Scholars studying this chronology, during the second half of the twentieth century, however, understood Egypt’s society and culture as a set of impermeable communities/ traditions, coexisting with one another. This interpretation caused a radical turn in the historiography of the period, and left material culture that did not belong exclusively to neither one of the main cultural sets (Greek or Egyptian) largely overlooked, and, later on, underestimated in the debates about interaction. This dissertation takes as a case study the Greco-Egyptian stone sculpture in the round of the male Ptolemaic rulers, looking to further understand these previously underestimated objects. They were not underestimated, however, in the sense that their existence was not acknowledged or analysed, but in the sense that the explanation put forward was not complex enough, nor representative. The authors formulated their interpretations mainly from the point of view of state and elites, outshadowing, thus, other possible realms of agency. The present investigation seeks to propose a different theoretical framework to interpret the existence of Greco-Egyptian statuary of Ptolemaic rulers. Although Ptolemaic Egypt is not understood today as a colonial case, postcolonial studies contributed to this alternative line of interpretation by inspiring a decentralization of the analysis, from the state to other groups. Nevertheless, the major contribution will come from an operational concept – “intericonicity” – and a theory of consumption - taken from material culture studies -, which decentralize the approach, from issues of power to other processes (also) underlying change and interaction.
publishDate 2020
dc.date.none.fl_str_mv 2020-04-02
2020-06-23
2020-04-02T00:00:00Z
2023-04-02T00:30:31Z
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