About Sieves and Sieving - 2 Angebote vergleichen

Bester Preis: 26,15 (vom 01.07.2019)
1
9783110608212 - About Sieves and Sieving

About Sieves and Sieving

Lieferung erfolgt aus/von: Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika EN NW EB DL

ISBN: 9783110608212 bzw. 3110608219, in Englisch, de Gruyter, Berlin/New York, Deutschland, neu, E-Book, elektronischer Download.

26,15 (C$ 38,95)¹
versandkostenfrei, unverbindlich
Lieferung aus: Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika, Lagernd, zzgl. Versandkosten.
The sieve exhibits a wide-ranging symbolism that extends across art history, philosophy, anthropology, psychoanalysis, and gender studies. Barbara Baert looks at the sieve from an interdisciplinary perspective and from four different innovative methodological angles: as motif and symbol, as technique and as paradigm. The sieve as motif goes back to Roman stories the Vestal Virgins. In later times, their impermeable sieve, which - according to legend - they used to fetch water from the River Tiber, was iconographically transferred to Elisabeth I as a sign of her integrity. Furthermore, the long durée life of sieves as symbolic-technical utilitarian object is investigated: in examples from the Jewish folklore, the Berber culture, and ancient Egypt.
2
9783110608212 - About Sieves and Sieving

About Sieves and Sieving

Lieferung erfolgt aus/von: Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika EN NW EB DL

ISBN: 9783110608212 bzw. 3110608219, in Englisch, de Gruyter, Berlin/New York, Deutschland, neu, E-Book, elektronischer Download.

28,74 (A$ 46,68)¹
versandkostenfrei, unverbindlich
Lieferung aus: Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika, Lagernd, zzgl. Versandkosten.
The sieve exhibits a wide-ranging symbolism that extends across art history, philosophy, anthropology, psychoanalysis, and gender studies. Barbara Baert looks at the sieve from an interdisciplinary perspective and from four different innovative methodological angles: as motif and symbol, as technique and as paradigm. The sieve as motif goes back to Roman stories the Vestal Virgins. In later times, their impermeable sieve, which - according to legend - they used to fetch water from the River Tiber, was iconographically transferred to Elisabeth I as a sign of her integrity. Furthermore, the long durée life of sieves as symbolic-technical utilitarian object is investigated: in examples from the Jewish folklore, the Berber culture, and ancient Egypt.
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