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The emperor and the world: exotic elements and the imaging of Middle Byzantine imperial power, ninth to thirteenth centuries C.E.


By


Abstract

"Byzantine imperial imagery is commonly perceived as a static system. In contrast to this common portrayal, this book draws attention to its openness and responsiveness to other artistic traditions. Through a close examination of significant objects and monuments created over a 350-year period, from the ninth to the thirteenth century, Alicia Walker shows how the visual articulation of Byzantine imperial power not only maintained a visual vocabulary inherited from Greco-Roman antiquity and the Judeo-Christian tradition, but also innovated on these artistic precedents by incorporating styles and forms from contemporary foreign cultures, specifically the Sasanian, Chinese, and Islamic worlds. In addition to art and architecture, this book explores historical accounts and literary works as well as records of ceremonial practices, thereby demonstrating how texts, ritual, and images operated as integrated agents of imperial power. Walker offers new ways to think about cross-cultural interaction in the Middle Ages and explores the diverse ways in which imperial images employed foreign elements in order to express particularly Byzantine meanings"--

Contents

Introduction: imaging emperor and empire in the middle Byzantine era -- 1. Emulation: Islamic imports in the iconoclastic era: power, prestige, and the imperial image -- 2. Appropriation: stylistic juxtaposition and the expression of power -- 3. Parity: crafting a Byzantine-Islamic community of kings -- 4. Expropriation: rhetorical images of the emperor and the articulation of difference -- 5. Incomparability: the aesthetics of imperial authority -- Conclusion.

Publisher

  • Publication

    Cambridge; New York: Cambridge University Press, 2012

  • Year


Is about

  • Subject

  • Period

    800-1299


Type

  • Language


Classification

  • ISBN

    • 9781107004771
    • 1107004772

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