jueves, 8 de enero de 2015

The Silkroad Foundation is pleased to announce the publication of the new annual volume of its journal. A summary of its contents:



This volume of The Silk Road begins with articles on costume, as depicted in a 6th-century tomb in China and in another of about a century later in Mongolia, both illustrating aspects of the cultural cross-fertilization between China and the nomadic cultures of the north. There is an article on tamgas which suggest connections across the Eurasian steppes. An examination of Indian cave paintings reveals Central Asian decorative elements. The famous Afrasiab murals get a fresh look. Early Iranian traditions help explain depictions of pain and mourning. Onomastics and considerations of genealogy offer new insights into early medieval nomad-sedentary relations in Western Eurasia. Three articles contain news of recent and ongoing excavations: at Rezvan Tepe in Iran, Banbhore in Pakistan, and Emgentiin Kherem in Mongolia. Two articles deal with carpet imagery, one offering an important new approach to understanding depictions in Renaissance paintings, the other illustrating ways o!
 f studying the connection between Safavid carpet motifs and miniatures. Huang Wenbi, a previously little appreciated archaeologist who worked on Silk Road sites in the early 20th-century, is featured in the next article. The featured museums this time are the David Collection in Copenhagen and the Chinese collection of the Seattle Art Museum. As always, there are many reviews and book notices, the lead review on an exciting re-examination of Eurasian exchange by Toby Wilkinson.

  The journal may be accessed from a contents page at

 <http://www.silkroadfoundation.org/newsletter/vol12/>, from which one can download either the entire volume or individual articles.

 The direct link to the pdf of the entire volume is:  <http://www.silkroadfoundation.org/newsletter/vol12/srjournal_v12.pdf>.

 The print version of the journal, which is supplied gratis to academic libraries, will be mailed in a few weeks.  We cannot accept individual subscriptions.

 The journal welcomes submissions for the next volume, which will appear in late 2015.  Information for authors is linked to the website; queries may be sent to the undersigned.

 With best wishes for the New Year,


Daniel Waugh
Editor
The Silk Road