Momigliano offers a remarkably detailed and nuanced overview of archaeological research on Crete and the history of the island in general. Such an attentive introduction and contextualisation ensures that readers unfamiliar with the ‘crypto-colonial’ roots of Minoan archaeology are given a solid foundation.

The Classical Review

[Momigliano's] choice of responses to the Minoans is based on engagement with the archaeological finds of Minoan Crete. This choice results in a fascinating discussion of novels, poems, paintings, travel texts and films that help us appreciate archaeology in a continuous dialogue with cultural production ... The book would be a welcome addition to a Classics Department library, and it would be valuable reading for undergraduate students in the field of Classics.

Journal of Classics Teaching

Ground-breaking ... This impressive and wide-ranging book establishes a framework for understanding the sometimes contradictory intellectual and cultural history of Minoan Crete.

International Journal of the Classical Tradition

Se alle

Momigliano’s book acts as an Ariadne’s thread that helps us trace the labyrinthine ways these myths have developed, by placing them in both their archaeological and socio-political contexts. ... <i>In Search of the Labyrinth</i> is a fascinating, wide-ranging, and detailed study of how a ‘civilization’ was created, adapted, and reconstituted from its inception.

European Journal of Archaeology

The result of a culmination of years of research, <i>In Search of the Labyrinth</i> is a fascinating and insightful book, accessible and appealing to academic and non-academic readers. M.’s engaging writing and the plethora of examples she cites ensure that everyone can find in its pages the Minoans one wishes to find.

Journal of Greek Archaeology

This is an engaging and insightful exploration of the modern fascination with Bronze Age Crete. A complex and glittering cast of modern Minoans steps forward within a historically situated narrative and under the author’s thoughtful gaze.

- Christine Morris, Andrew A. David Associate Professor in Greek Archaeology and History, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland,

Longlisted for the Runciman Book Award 2021
Shortlisted for the European Association of Archaeologists 2023 book prize

In Search of the Labyrinth
explores the enduring cultural legacy of Minoan Crete by offering an overview of Minoan archaeology and modern responses to it in literature, the visual and performing arts, and other cultural practices. The focus is on the twentieth century, and on responses that involve a clear engagement with the material culture of Minoan Crete, not just with mythological narratives in Classical sources, as illustrated by the works of novelists, poets, avant-garde artists, couturiers, musicians, philosophers, architects, film directors, and even psychoanalysts – from Sigmund Freud and Marcel Proust to D.H. Lawrence, Cecil Day-Lewis, Oswald Spengler, Nikos Kazantzakis, Robert Graves, André Gide, Mary Renault, Christa Wolf, Don DeLillo, Rhea Galanaki, Léon Bakst, Marc Chagall, Mariano Fortuny, Robert Wise, Martin Heidegger, Karl Lagerfeld, and Harrison Birtwistle, among many others. The volume also explores the fascination with things Minoan in antiquity and in the present millennium: from Minoan-inspired motifs decorating pottery of the Greek Early Iron Age, to uses of the Minoans in twenty-first-century music, poetry, fashion, and other media.

Les mer
When Heinrich Schliemann carried out his famous excavations at Troy and Mycenae he seemed also to be giving mythical Homeric heroes like Agamemnon historical flesh, blood and bone.

List of tables and figures
Preface and Acknowledgments

Chapter 1. Introduction: desperately seeking Ariadne – the cultural legacy of Minoan Crete

Chapter 2. Sons of Europa: from medical remedies for constipation to bestiality, sexually transmitted death, and the dawn of the ‘Minoan Age’ (from antiquity to mid-19th c.)

Chapter 3. Rediscovering European origins: Ariadne as the Great Mother Goddess (mid-19th century-World War I)

Chapter 4. Minoans and World Wars (c. 1915-1949): the Aryan revenge

Chapter 5. The Minoans in the Cold War and swinging sixties: from the end of the Greek civil war to the end of the Colonels’ dictatorship (c. 1949-1974)

Chapter 6. Minoan paradises lost and regained: from cannibalism to postmodernism (c. 1975-1999)

Chapter 7. Minoan cultural legacies – every age has the Minoans it deserves and desires

Notes
Bibliography
Index

Les mer
The first exploration of the legacy of Crete, fabled for its mythology and its archaeology.
A dynamic and wide-ranging guide to the reception of Crete
New Directions in Classics is a series of short monographs on Classical antiquity and its reception, covering subjects from across the entire spectrum of ancient Mediterranean culture, including its literature, history, material survivals, and their afterlife in diverse media. These volumes move the discipline of Classics forward by breaking new ground, whether in their combination of sources or their method, and by presenting pluralist studies that blend and transcend modes of analysis that have enriched Classics, broadly defined, in recent decades. As fresh and stimulating takes on their topics they are characterized by their dynamism, intellectual energy, and interdisciplinary scope, and are accessible without compromising on academic rigour.
Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781784538545
Publisert
2020-09-03
Utgiver
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Vekt
1440 gr
Høyde
236 mm
Bredde
158 mm
Dybde
26 mm
Aldersnivå
UP, P, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
384

Biografisk notat

Nicoletta Momigliano is Professor of Aegean Studies at the University of Bristol, UK. She specialises in Minoan archaeology and has directed and co-directed several archaeological projects in Crete and Turkey, including excavations at Knossos and Palaikastro, and field surveys in Lycia. Her previous books include Duncan Mackenzie: A Cautious Canny Highlander and the Palace of Minos at Knossos (1999), Archaeology and European Modernity: Producing and Consuming the ‘Minoans’ (edited with Y. Hamilakis, 2006), Knossos Pottery Handbook: Neolithic and Bronze Age (Minoan) (2007), and Cretomania: Modern Desires for the Minoan Past (edited with A. Farnoux, 2017).