Old Lands takes readers on an epic journey through the legion spaces and times of the Eastern Peloponnese, trailing in the footsteps of a Roman periegete, an Ottoman traveler, antiquarians, and anonymous agrarians.
Following waters in search of rest through the lens of Lucretian poetics, Christopher Witmore reconstitutes an untimely mode of ambulatory writing, chorography, mindful of the challenges we all face in these precarious times. Turning on pressing concerns that arise out of object-oriented encounters, Old Lands ponders the disappearance of an agrarian world rooted in the Neolithic, the transition to urban-styles of living, and changes in communication, movement, and metabolism, while opening fresh perspectives on long-term inhabitation, changing mobilities, and appropriation through pollution. Carefully composed with those objects encountered along its varied paths, this book offers an original and wonderous account of a region in twenty-seven segments, and fulfills a longstanding ambition within archaeology to generate a polychronic narrative that stands as a complement and alternative to diachronic history.
Old Lands will be of interest to historians, archaeologists, anthropologists, and scholars of the Eastern Peloponnese. Those interested in the long-term changes in society, technology, and culture in this region will find this book captivating.
By:
Christopher Witmore
Imprint: Routledge
Country of Publication: United States
Dimensions:
Height: 234mm,
Width: 156mm,
Weight: 940g
ISBN: 9780815363446
ISBN 10: 0815363443
Pages: 564
Publication Date: 30 April 2020
Audience:
College/higher education
,
General/trade
,
Primary
,
ELT Advanced
Format: Paperback
Publisher's Status: Active
Prologue: The measure of the Morea?; 1. Lines in stone: Roads, canals, walls, faults, and marine terraces; 2. Ancient Corinth: Descent into memory, ascent into oblivion; 3. Acrocorinth: From gate to summit; 4. Along the A7 (Moréas), by car; 5. Kleonai to Nemea; 6. Nemea: A transect; 7. An erstwhile aqueduct: Lucretian flow; 8. To Mykenes station, by train; 9. About Mycenae, history and archaeology; 10. A path to the Heraion; 11. Through groves of citrus to Argos; 12. Argos, a democratic polis and Plutarch’s Pyrrhus, a synkrisis (comparison); 13. Modern spectacle through an ancient theatre; 14. Argos to Anapli on the hoof, with a stop at Tiryns; 15. A stroll through Nafplion; 16. The road to Epidaurus: Frazer and Pausanias; 17. Paleolithic to Bronze Age amid Venetian: A museum; 18. To Asine: Legal objects; 19. To Vivari, by boat; 20. Into the Bedheni Valley; 21. Through the Southern Argolid; 22. Ermioni/Hermion/Kastri: A topology; 23. Looking southwest, to what has become of an ancient oikos; 24. Across the Adheres, iterations; 25. Troizen, verdant and in ruin; 26. To Methana; 27. Into the Saronic Gulf; Epilogue: On chorography
Christopher Witmore is professor of archaeology and classics at Texas Tech University. He is co-author of Archaeology: The Discipline of Things (2012, with B. Olsen, M. Shanks, and T. Webmoor). Routledge published his co-edited Archaeology in the Making in 2013 (paperback 2017, with W. Rathje and M. Shanks). He is also co-editor of the Routledge series Archaeological Orientations (with G. Lucas).
Reviews for Old Lands: A Chorography of the Eastern Peloponnese
In this bold and experimental work, Christopher Whitmore brilliantly renews and transforms the genre of chorography. A book that defies categorization, it is part history, part travel diary, part reflection on the present, and part theoretical reflection on archaeology and how archaeology ought to be conducted. Over the course of twenty-seven segments, the reader is taken on a journey across the Peloponnese making you feel as if you are witnessing these lands alongside him. Written in lyrical and erudite prose, Old Lands calls for nothing less than a complete reconceptualization of the ontology of space and time. This provocative book is destined to be discussed for some time, and deserves to be read widely in the discipline of archaeology and beyond. - Levi R. Bryant, Collin College, USA