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9780192869586

Forgery Beyond Deceit Fabrication, Value, and the Desire for Ancient Rome

by ;
  • ISBN13:

    9780192869586

  • ISBN10:

    0192869582

  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 2023-10-27
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press

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Summary

What do forgeries do? Forgery Beyond Deceit: Fabrication, Value, and the Desire for Ancient Rome explores that question with a focus on forgery in ancient Rome and of ancient Rome. Its chapters reach from antiquity to the twentieth century and cover literature and art, the two areas that predominate in forgery studies, as well as the forgery of physical books, coins, and religious relics. The book examines the cultural, historical, and rhetorical functions of forgery that extend beyond the desire to deceive and profit. It analyses forgery in connection with related phenomena like pseudepigraphy, fakes, and copies; and it investigates the aesthetic and historical value that forgeries possess when scholarship takes seriously their form, content, and varied uses within and across cultures. Of particular interest is the way that forgeries embody a desire for the ancient and for the recovery of the fragmentary past of ancient Rome.

Author Biography


John North Hopkins, Associate Professor of the Art and Archaeology of Ancient Mediterranean peoples, New York University,Scott McGill, Deedee McMurty Professor in the Humanities, Rice University

John Hopkins is Associate Professor of the art and archaeology of ancient Mediterranean peoples at New York University. He is author of The Genesis of Roman Architecture and Unbinding Rome: Art and Craft in a Fluid Landscape, 700-200 BCE (2016). He is co-editor with Sarah Kielt Costello and Paul R. Davis of Object Biographies: Collaborative Approaches to Ancient Mediterranean Art (2020).

Scott McGill is Deedee McMurty Professor in the Humanities at Rice University. He is the author of four books, including most recently Virgil: Aeneid 11. A Commentary (2020), and the co-editor of three volumes. His translation, with Susannah Wright, of Virgil's Aeneid is forthcoming with Norton Press.

Table of Contents


Introduction, John North Hopkins and Scott McGill
Prologue: Ideas of Forgery, Kenneth Lapatin
1. 'Corinthian Bronzes': Miniature Masterpieces - Flagrant Forgeries, Christopher H. Hallett
2. Reading Against the Grain: Book Forgery and Book Labor at Rome, Joseph A. Howley
3. Imperial Greek Atticism: A Culture of Forgery? Phrynicus and the Terminology of 'Authenticity', Lawrence Kim
4. Forgery, Pseudepigrapha, and Other Typologies of Continuation in Latin Literature, Irene Peirano Garrison
5. The Fluidity of False Coins, Carolyn Higbie
6. Ancient Texts and Sibylline Truths: A Reflection on Forged Documentary Evidence and its Value in the Historia Augusta, Kathryn A. Langenfeld
7. Thinking with Antiquity's Ancient Beginnings: The "First Pagan Historian" from Isidore of Seville to Thomas Jefferson, Frederic Clark
8. Forgery and the Desire for the Classical Author in the Pseudo-Ovidian De vetula, Jacqueline M. Burek
9. Archaeology and the Invention of Holy Bodies in Post-Tridentine Rome, Talia Di Manno
10. Deceptively Authentic Additions, Sascha Kansteiner
11. Is Restoration Forgery?, Elizabeth Bartman
12. Fictional Forgeries and the Twilight of the Self: The Tablets of Armand Schwerner and Pascale Quignard, Sean Alexander Gurd
Epilogue: Beyond Deceit and Beyond: Situating Scholarship on Forgery, Jeffrey Collins
List of illustrations
Bibliography

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