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  1. Moving Images: Fifth-Century Victory Monuments and the Athlete's Allure.Deborah Steiner - 1998 - Classical Antiquity 17 (1):123-150.
    This article treats representations of victors in the Greek athletic games in the artistic and poetic media of the early classical age, and argues that fifth-century sculptors, painters and poets similarly constructed the athlete as an object designed to arouse desire in audiences for their works. After reviewing the very scanty archaeological evidence for the original victory images, I seek to recover something of the response elicited by these monuments by looking to visualizations of athletes in contemporary vase-painting and literary (...)
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  • Misunderstood Gestures: Iconatrophy and the Reception of Greek Sculpture in the Roman Imperial Period.Catherine M. Keesling - 2005 - Classical Antiquity 24 (1):41-79.
    Anthropologists have defined iconatrophy as a process by which oral traditions originate as explanations for objects that, through the passage of time, have ceased to make sense to their viewers. One form of iconatrophy involves the misinterpretation of statues' identities, iconography, or locations. Stories that ultimately derive from such misunderstandings of statues are Monument-Novellen, a term coined by Herodotean studies. Applying the concept of iconatrophy to Greek sculpture of the Archaic and Classical periods yields three possible examples in which statues (...)
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