Source: https://classicsconfidential.co.uk/2018/09/21/memory2/
Timestamp: 2019-04-24 09:01:19+00:00

Document:
This is the second in a pair of audio programmes on ROMAN MEMORY.
Sonia Muro Castillo (Souvenirs Agrigento) on her campaign to rid Sicily of Mafia-related souvenirs, and almonds in Agrigento (scroll down for a photograph).
Valerie Hope (The Open University) on Roman mourning and mementoes in the funerary sphere, including the epitaph of Allia Potestas.
You can listen on iTunes (where you can subscribe to the podcast – note that this feed takes a while to update, so the current episode may be slightly delayed in appearing in the list).
Graham, E-J. (forthcoming) Religion, material culture and the body in the Roman world. London and New York, Routledge (under contract).
Graham, E-J. (2018). ‘There buds the laurel’: Nature, temporality, and the making of place in the cemeteries of Roman Italy. Theoretical Roman Archaeology Journal 1(1): 3, pp. 1–16, DOI: http://doi.org/10.16995/traj.147 (Open Access).
Graham, E-J. (2011) ‘Memory and materiality: re-embodying the Roman funeral’, in V. M. Hope and J. Huskinson (eds.). Memory and Mourning: Studies on Roman Death. Oxford, Oxbow, pp. 21–39.
Hope, V. M. (2017) ‘Living without the dead: finding solace in ancient Rome’ in F. Tappenden and C. Daniel-Hughes (eds.), Coming Back to Life. The Permeability of Past and Present, Mortality and Immortality, Death and Life in the Ancient Mediterranean, McGill Scholarly Publishing: 39-70.
Hope, V. M. (2017) ‘A sense of grief: the role of the senses in the performance of Roman mourning’ in E. Betts (ed.) Senses of the Empire.: Multisensory Approaches to Roman Culture, Routledge: 86-103.
Hope, V. M. (2009) Roman Death. The Dying and the Dead in Ancient Rome. Continuum.
Hope, V. M. (2011) ‘Remembering to mourn: personal mementos of the dead in ancient Rome’ in V. Hope and J. Huskinson (eds.), Memory and Mourning: Studies on Roman Death, Oxbow: 176-195.
Kamash, Z. (2018) ”Sweet and delicious, he who tastes it will go back to it’: food, memory and religion in the Roman Middle East’, Theoretical Roman Archaeology Journal, 11.06.2018.
Kamash, Z. (2016) ‘Memory in Roman Britain’, The Oxford Handbook of Roman Britain ed. M. Millett, A. Moore and L. Revell. Oxford University Press: 681-696.
Kamash, Z. (2015). ‘Memory, materiality and religion in Roman Britain’, Archaeology, Syncretism, Creolisation. Oxford University Press.
Künzl, E. (2008) ‘Enamelled bronzes from Roman Britain: Celtic art and tourist knick-knacks’, Current Archaeology 222: 22-27.
Künzl, E. (2004) Souvenirs und Devotionalien. Zeugnisse des geschäftlichen, religiösen und kulturellen Tourismus im antiken Römerreich. Sonderband Antike Welt. Zaberns Bildbände zur Archäologie, Mainz: Zabern.
Popkin, M. (forthcoming) Object Memory: Souvenirs and Memorabilia in the Roman World.
Popkin, M. (2018) “Urban Images in Glass from the Late Roman Empire: The Souvenir Flasks of Puteoli and Baiae.” American Journal of Archaeology122.3: 427-462.
Popkin, M. (2017) “Souvenirs and Memory Manipulation in the Roman Empire: The Glass Flasks of Ancient Pozzuoli,” in Materializing Memories in Art and Popular Culture, ed. László Munteán, Liedeke Plate, and Anneke Smelik. Routledge: 45-61.
Cattle figurine from Marcham Frilford: photograph by Ian Cartwright – School of Archaeology, University of Oxford.

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