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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Lisa Trentin (Instructor, Archaeology and Classical Studies, Wilfrid Laurier University, Canada)Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Imprint: Bloomsbury Academic Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 1.00cm , Length: 23.40cm Weight: 0.272kg ISBN: 9781350019140ISBN 10: 1350019143 Pages: 192 Publication Date: 26 January 2017 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Tertiary & Higher Education , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsList of Illustrations Preface Acknowledgements Abbreviations Introduction 1. What's in a hump? Representing the Hunchback 2. Multum in Parvo: The Hunchback in Miniature 3. Kai su: The Hyperphallic Hunchback 4. Men who are not Men? Gendering the Hunchback Conclusion Catalogue and Plates Notes Bibliography Illustration Credits IndexReviewsTrentin's catalogue and comprehensive, up-to-date bibliography constitute an important scholarly resource ... This is a book that intelligently advances debates about representations of disability and the Other. * Classics Ireland * Trentino's book makes its contribution to the historiography of disability by bringing together all representations of the hunchback known throughout Antiquity ... This book represents a remarkable work and it often develops interesting reflections on difficult matters. * Revue des etudes anciennes [Bloomsbury translation] * Perhaps nowhere is the fundamental strangeness of Hellenistic and Roman mindset more obvious than in the popularity of hunchback figures in art. Ugly-but-desirable, humorous-but-serious, pitiable-but-lucky, they reveal complex and seemingly contradictory attitudes towards physical deformity that cannot easily be mapped onto the modern. Lisa Trentin's book represents the only comprehensive treatment in English of hunchback figures, both male and female. It brings together a large catalogue of important material and thoughtful discussion in a single, accessible volume, and will be an important resource to scholars and students of ancient art and to historians of the human body. This is a thought-provoking analysis of a representational type which has long remained marginalized. The catalogue of fifty-five representations of hunchbacks is in itself an invaluable resource. Perhaps nowhere is the fundamental strangeness of Hellenistic and Roman mindset more obvious than in the popularity of hunchback figures in art. Ugly-but-desirable, humorous-but-serious, pitiable-but-lucky, they reveal complex and seemingly contradictory attitudes towards physical deformity that cannot easily be mapped onto the modern. Lisa Trentin's book represents the only comprehensive treatment in English of hunchback figures, both male and female. It brings together a large catalogue of important material and thoughtful discussion in a single, accessible volume, and will be an important resource to scholars and students of ancient art and to historians of the human body. -- Jane Masseglia, Research Fellow: Ashmolean Latin Inscriptions Project (AshLI), University of Oxford, UK This is a thought-provoking analysis of a representational type which has long remained marginalized. The catalogue of fifty-five representations of hunchbacks is in itself an invaluable resource. -- Barbara Kellum, Professor of Art, Smith College, USA Trentin's book makes its contribution to the historiography of disability by bringing together all representations of the hunchback known throughout Antiquity ... This book represents a remarkable work and it often develops interesting reflections on difficult matters. * Revue des etudes anciennes [Bloomsbury translation] * Perhaps nowhere is the fundamental strangeness of Hellenistic and Roman mindset more obvious than in the popularity of hunchback figures in art. Ugly-but-desirable, humorous-but-serious, pitiable-but-lucky, they reveal complex and seemingly contradictory attitudes towards physical deformity that cannot easily be mapped onto the modern. Lisa Trentin's book represents the only comprehensive treatment in English of hunchback figures, both male and female. It brings together a large catalogue of important material and thoughtful discussion in a single, accessible volume, and will be an important resource to scholars and students of ancient art and to historians of the human body. -- Jane Masseglia, Research Fellow: Ashmolean Latin Inscriptions Project (AshLI), University of Oxford, UK This is a thought-provoking analysis of a representational type which has long remained marginalized. The catalogue of fifty-five representations of hunchbacks is in itself an invaluable resource. -- Barbara Kellum, Professor of Art, Smith College, USA Trentin's catalogue and comprehensive, up-to-date bibliography constitute an important scholarly resource ... This is a book that intelligently advances debates about representations of disability and the Other. * Classics Ireland * Trentino's book makes its contribution to the historiography of disability by bringing together all representations of the hunchback known throughout Antiquity ... This book represents a remarkable work and it often develops interesting reflections on difficult matters. * Revue des etudes anciennes [Bloomsbury translation] * Perhaps nowhere is the fundamental strangeness of Hellenistic and Roman mindset more obvious than in the popularity of hunchback figures in art. Ugly-but-desirable, humorous-but-serious, pitiable-but-lucky, they reveal complex and seemingly contradictory attitudes towards physical deformity that cannot easily be mapped onto the modern. Lisa Trentin's book represents the only comprehensive treatment in English of hunchback figures, both male and female. It brings together a large catalogue of important material and thoughtful discussion in a single, accessible volume, and will be an important resource to scholars and students of ancient art and to historians of the human body. -- Jane Masseglia, Research Fellow: Ashmolean Latin Inscriptions Project (AshLI), University of Oxford, UK This is a thought-provoking analysis of a representational type which has long remained marginalized. The catalogue of fifty-five representations of hunchbacks is in itself an invaluable resource. -- Barbara Kellum, Professor of Art, Smith College, USA Author InformationLisa Trentin is Lecturer in Classics in the Department of Historical Studies, University of Toronto Mississauga, Canada. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |