From the dawn of ancient civilization to modern times, the
Mediterranean Sea looms in the imagination of the people living on its
shores as a space of myth and adventure, of conquest and
confrontation, of migration and settlement, of religious ferment and
conflict. Since its waters linked the earliest empires and centers of
civilization, the Mediterranean generated globalization and
multiculturalism. It gave birth to the three great
monotheisms—Judaism, Christianity, and Islam—religions of the
book, of the land and of the sea. Over the centuries, the
Mediterranean witnessed the rise and fall of some of the oldest
civilizations in the world. And as these cultures succeeded one
another, century after century, each left a tantalizing imprint on
later societies. Like the ancient artifacts constantly washed up from
its depths, the lost cities and monuments abandoned in its deserts or
sunk beneath its waves, Mediterranean topography and culture is a
chaotic present spread over a palimpsest many layers deep. No region
grappled more continuously with, nor was more deeply marked by
Mediterranean culture and history than Europe. Europe’s religions,
its languages, its learning, its laws, its sense of history, even its
food and agriculture, all derived from Greek, Roman, and—in the
Middle Ages—Muslim and Jewish cultures. The essays in this book lay
bare the dynamics of cultural confrontation between Europe and the
Mediterranean world from medieval to modern times. One momentous
result of this engagement was the creation of vernacular languages and
the diverse body of literature, history, and art arising from them.
The achievements of the arts reveal—to borrow a geological
metaphor—the grinding tectonic pates of Mediterranean cultures and
languages butting up against pre-existing European strata.
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Mediterranean Palimpsests in European Culture
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781433143151
Publisert
2019
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Peter Lang
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok