Pompeii: The Life of a Roman Town

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Pompeii: The Life of a Roman Town

Pompeii: The Life of a Roman Town

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With unparalleled access to Pompeii and featuring cutting-edge modern technology, Mary Beard guides us through this amazing slice of the ancient world. On 5 January 2019, Beard gave the sesquicentennial Public Lecture for the Society for Classical Studies, marking the 150-year anniversary of the organisation. [31] The topic of her presentation was "What do we mean by Classics now?" The first adventure in the Folio Society editions of ‘The Magic Faraway Tree’ series, Enid Blyton’s The Enchanted Wood features Jonathan Burton’s enchanting illustrations and a new introduction by Michael Morpurgo.

Mary Beard - Profile Books Mary Beard - Profile Books

Pompeii is the most famous dead city in the world. In 79 CE, Mount Vesuvius erupted and buried the Roman city beneath untold tons of volcanic ash. Death is a part of life. But in the case of Pompeii, her death is her legacy. Pompeii exists today because she was buried. It is her tomb-ness that gives her immortality. When we think of Pompeii, we think of the plaster molds taken of the people who died in the eruption; molds that capture their postures in the last instant of life. Pompeii is a mausoleum. It is Death excavated by archaeologists and run for the enjoyment of tourists. As time has passed, her writing style, compared with the early, careful academic articles, has become more like her spoken voice. The Beard of the first Vestals article of 1980 would never have used, as an epigraph, a quote from a Procol Harum lyric – as did the Beard of the later Vestals paper repudiating her earlier ideas. “I saw eventually that you could write ‘scholarly articles’ in a style that felt right for you and didn’t feel significantly different from the way you wrote a review,” she told me.At her direct grant school, Beard was the star pupil. 'I did Latin and Greek and I was very good at it,' she says matter-of-factly. At this point, she does that English amateur thing of affecting to treat her studies as a bit of a game: 'Never being much of a swot, with no interest in homework, I used to do a term's worth of unseen translations in the first week and have the rest of the term to myself.' You may also opt to downgrade to Standard Digital, a robust journalistic offering that fulfils many user’s needs. Compare Standard and Premium Digital here. Ramaswamy, Chitra (19 February 2018). "The fallout from Mary Beard's Oxfam tweet shines a light on genteel racism | Chitra Ramaswamy". The Guardian . Retrieved 22 June 2018.

Mary Beard (classicist) - Wikipedia

In Beard's first year she found some men in the university still held very dismissive attitudes regarding the academic potential of women, which only strengthened her determination to succeed. [12] She also developed feminist views that remained "hugely important" in her later life, although she later described "modern orthodox feminism" as partly cant. [5] One of her tutors was Joyce Reynolds. Beard has since said that "Newnham could do better in making itself a place where critical issues can be generated" and has also described her views on feminism, saying "I actually can't understand what it would be to be a woman without being a feminist." [13] Beard has cited Germaine Greer's The Female Eunuch, Kate Millett's Sexual Politics, and Robert Munsch’s The Paper Bag Princess as influential on the development of her personal feminism. [14] Twelve Caesars: Images of Power from the Ancient World to the Modern ( Princeton University Press, 2021) ISBN 978-0691222363Part of the problem is that the city's population was not, as Doctor Who suggested, wiped out in a single day amid a wholly unanticipated cataclysm. On the contrary: all but the brave or foolhardy had already fled their homes before the climactic pyroclastic surge descended from Vesuvius to entomb the remaining Pompeiians for good. The implications of this for archaeologists and historians, as Beard makes clear in a typically invigorating chapter, are profound: for what we have frozen in Pompeii is not a scene from everyday life, but rather a place that was already well on its way to becoming a ghost town. The denuded character of the houses bears witness less to a taste for minimalism, than to wholesale evacuation. Beard, Mary (22 December 2018). "My feminist icon: Mary Beard reveals who inspires her". Stylist.co.uk . Retrieved 7 December 2021. HowTheTricolorGotItsStripes is a highly entertaining and likeable history of flags by Ukrainian ex-cabinet Minister Dmytro Dubilet and was originally published in Ukrainian 🇺🇦

BBC One - Pompeii: New Secrets Revealed with Mary Beard

Mary Beard says she has wanted to write about Pompeii for 'about 30 years', ever since she travelled there as an undergraduate with a passion for Roman archaeology. The old town has attracted its fair share of popular attention, from Frankie Howerd to Robert Harris, but rarely has it inspired the scrutiny of a classical scholar who confesses to a fascination with bad breath, Roman sex and 'the sheer puzzlement of it all. Where did they go to the loo in the amphitheatre?' Classicist Mary Beard on Feminism, Online Trolls and What Ancient Rome Can Tell Us About Trump". Time.com. 4 September 2018 . Retrieved 7 December 2021. O’Donovan, Gerard (26 July 2013). "Mary Beard takes on Caligula, the emperor with the worst reputation in history". The Daily Telegraph . Retrieved 3 December 2017.Helmet of a ‘Thracian’ (Thrax) gladiator. Bronze, from Pompeii, first century CE. (Electa/akg-images) a b Williams, Zoe (23 April 2016). "Mary Beard: 'The role of the academic is to make everything less simple' ". The Guardian . Retrieved 3 December 2017. It is sad that Beard does not devote text to Herculaneum. In the documentary she did - one visits its sewers with her. Discover the captivating origins and hidden meanings of the flags that we all know today in this sparkling tour through this universal subject!

Pompeii - the Life of a Roman Town by Mary Beard | Goodreads Pompeii - the Life of a Roman Town by Mary Beard | Goodreads

a b "Appointments, reappointments, and grants of title". Cambridge University Reporter. CXXXV.20 (5992). 2 March 2005. A Point of View, The Oxbridge Interview". BBC Radio 4. 27 November 2011 . Retrieved 29 January 2017. That's the great thing about your full-blown classicist: for students of Homer, Ovid and Thucydides, there's nothing new under the sun. By the same token, the tall, witchily grey-haired, rather shambling scholar in academic robes who crosses the Newnham quadrangle to greet me on a dank vacation afternoon could have stepped from the cloister at any time in the last 2,000 years. Ando, Clifford (29 February 2016). "The Rise and Rise of Rome". The New Rambler . Retrieved 24 May 2016. In 2019, Beard appeared in an episode of The Grand Tour, having dinner with host James May, in his effort to get his car photographed by paparazzi. [52]Mary Beard to fund classics students from under-represented groups". The Guardian. 14 May 2021 . Retrieved 14 May 2021. Sesquicentennial Public Lecture: Mary Beard". Society for Classical Studies. 8 February 2018 . Retrieved 9 December 2018.



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