Familiarity and Phenomenology in Greece: Accumulated Votives as Group-made Monuments

IF 0.2 0 RELIGION
K. Rask
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Abstract Greek devotional activity from the eighth through third centuries included the accumulation of common votive types, many of which exhibited similar motifs and repetitive designs. This paper explores constructed assemblages by focusing on the dedication of objects featuring visual and iconographic “sameness.” Building on the work of D. Morgan and J. González, this paper theorizes Greek votive accumulations as larger conglomerations that impact religious experience through the artifacts’ very number and ubiquity. Evidence from Athens and Corinth suggests that an individual’s personal biography and past movements through the local landscape gave pervasive religious imagery a sense of familiarity and meaningfulness. While the appearance of ubiquitous votives may have been dictated by tradition and manufacturing realities, their use to create monumental votive deposits had phenomenological impact. Drawing on evidence from treasury records and excavated material at a number of Greek sanctuaries, this paper argues that, when they formed assemblages of repetitive religious images, worshippers created larger, dynamic monuments out of individual items. The clustered offerings participated in an “aesthetics of accumulation,” visually and physically linking individuals to a network of other worshippers.
希腊的熟悉与现象学:作为群体纪念碑的累积誓言
从八世纪到三世纪的抽象希腊宗教活动包括常见还愿类型的积累,其中许多都表现出相似的主题和重复的设计。本文通过关注以视觉和图像“相同”为特征的物体的奉献来探索构建的组合。在D.Morgan和J.González的工作基础上,本文将希腊的还愿堆积理论化为更大的聚集,通过文物的数量和普遍性影响宗教体验。来自雅典和科林斯的证据表明,一个人的个人传记和过去在当地景观中的运动给了无处不在的宗教意象一种熟悉感和意义感。虽然无处不在的还愿词的出现可能是由传统和制造现实决定的,但它们用于创造不朽的还愿词沉积物具有现象学影响。根据财政部记录和一些希腊圣地的挖掘材料中的证据,本文认为,当他们形成重复的宗教图像组合时,崇拜者用单个物品创造了更大、更有活力的纪念碑。聚集的供品参与了一种“积累美学”,在视觉和物理上将个人与其他崇拜者的网络联系起来。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
0.40
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