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Civilisations : how do we look?/the eye of faith /

by Beard, Mary.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: London : Profile Books, 2018Description: 240 pages : illustrations (colour) ; 23 cm.ISBN: 9781781259993 (hbk.) :; 1781259992 (hbk.) :.Classification number: 909 BEASubject(s): Civilization -- Popular works | Art and religion -- Popular works | History | HistorySummary: Kenneth Clark's 1969 BBC series 'Civilisation' is perhaps the most celebrated documentary series ever made, except that it was entirely of its time: patrician to the exclusion of women and western to the exclusion of all other cultures. 2018 sees an ambitious BBC re-make, embracing global civilisations and exploring different themes in the universal histories of art and culture. In this book, Mary Beard investigates two aspects of what it means to be human. In Part I, she focuses on some of the earliest human figures in art - from the Olmec heads of pre-historic Mexico to the first nudes of the ancient Greek world, asking what were these images for, how they were understood by people in the past and why were they sometimes so dangerous and unsettling. In Part II, Beard shows how for millennia art has inspired religion as much as religion has inspired art.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Book - Adult Hardback Crosby Library Adult Non-Fiction 909 BEA (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 002953596X
Book - Adult Hardback Formby Library Adult Non-Fiction 909 BEA (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 002953594X
Book - Adult Hardback Maghull Library Adult Non-Fiction 909 BEA (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 002953595X
Book - Adult Hardback Southport Library Adult Non-Fiction 909 BEA (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 002953593X
Total holds: 0

TV tie-in.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Kenneth Clark's 1969 BBC series 'Civilisation' is perhaps the most celebrated documentary series ever made, except that it was entirely of its time: patrician to the exclusion of women and western to the exclusion of all other cultures. 2018 sees an ambitious BBC re-make, embracing global civilisations and exploring different themes in the universal histories of art and culture. In this book, Mary Beard investigates two aspects of what it means to be human. In Part I, she focuses on some of the earliest human figures in art - from the Olmec heads of pre-historic Mexico to the first nudes of the ancient Greek world, asking what were these images for, how they were understood by people in the past and why were they sometimes so dangerous and unsettling. In Part II, Beard shows how for millennia art has inspired religion as much as religion has inspired art.

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