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E-grāmata: Cultural Responses to the Persian Wars: Antiquity to the Third Millennium

Edited by (, Associate Lecturer in Classics, Open University), Edited by (, Professor of Classics and Drama, Royal Holloway, and Co-Director, Archive of Performances of Greek and Roman Drama, University of Oxford), Edited by (, Honorary Professor of Ancient History,)
  • Formāts: PDF+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 15-Feb-2007
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780191557514
  • Formāts - PDF+DRM
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  • Formāts: PDF+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 15-Feb-2007
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780191557514

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Cultural Responses to the Persian Wars addresses the huge impact on subsequent culture made by the wars fought between ancient Persia and Greece in the early fifth century BC. It brings together sixteen interdisciplinary essays, mostly by classical scholars, on individual trends within the reception of this period of history, extending from the wars' immediate impact on ancient Greek history to their reception in literature and thought both in antiquity and in the post-Renaisssance world. Extensively illustrated and accessibly written, with a detailed Introduction and bibliographies, this book will interest historians, classicists, and students of both comparative and modern literatures.

Recenzijas

...one must applaud a number of fine contributions among the sixteen essays... * Victor Davis Hanson, TLS * Wide-ranging, accessible and eclectric, this volume establishes itself effortlessly as a standard text within an ever-burgeoning field of reception studies. * Joseph Skinner, JHS * ...a major contribution to Classical reception-studies and to Western cultural historiography more generally. * Paul Cartledge, The Anglo-Hellenic Review * ...a useful entree for assessing the impact of the Greco-Persian conflict on medieval/Byzantine societies...Highly recommended. * Choice * Anyone interested in the cultural significance of the Persian Wars from antiquity to the modern era will have cause to turn to this volume for a wide range of approaches to the reception of the Persian Wars in the separate chapters covering more than two millennia and various topics. * Bryn Mawr Reviews * highly interesting * Alan Beal, The Journal of Classics Teaching *

List of Illustrations
ix
List of Contributors
xii
Note on Abbreviations xvi
SECTION I. ARCHETYPAL THEME
Introduction
3(28)
Emma Bridges
Edith Hall
P. J. Rhodes
The Impact of the Persian Wars on Classical Greece
31(16)
P. J. Rhodes
Xerxes' Homer
47(18)
Johannes Haubold
The View from Eleusis: Demeter in the Persian Wars
65(20)
Deborah Boedeker
SECTION II. ANCIENT VARIATIONS
Plato and the Persian Wars
85(20)
Christopher Rowe
The Persian Wars in Fourth-Century Oratory and Historiography
105(22)
John Marincola
Images of the Persian Wars in Rome
127(18)
Philip Hardie
De Malignitate Plutarchi: Plutarch, Herodotus, and the Persian Wars
145(22)
Christopher Pelling
SECTION III. RENAISSANCE AND ENLIGHTENMENT REDISCOVERY
Aeschylus' Persians via the Ottoman Empire to Saddam Hussein
167(34)
Edith Hall
Operatic Variations on an Episode at the Hellespont
201(30)
David Kimbell
`Shrines of the Mighty': Rediscovering the Battlefields of the Persian Wars
231(36)
Ian Macgregor Morris
SECTION IV. NATIONHOOD AND IDENTITY
From Marathon to Waterloo: Byron, Battle Monuments, and the Persian Wars
267(32)
Timothy Rood
Enacting History and Patriotic Myth: Aeschylus' Persians on the Eve of the Greek War of Independence
299(32)
Gonda Van Steen
The Persian Wars as the `Origin' of Historiography: Ancient and Modern Orientalism in George Grote's History of Greece
331(24)
Alexandra Lianeri
`People Like Us' in the Face of History: Cormon's Les Vainqueurs de Salamine
355(28)
Clemence Schultze
SECTION V. LEONIDAS IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY
Xerxes Goes to Hollywood
383(22)
D. S. Levene
The Guts and the Glory: Pressfield's Spartans at the Gates of Fire
405(18)
Emma Bridges
Index 423


Emma Bridges is Associate Lecturer in Classics, Open University.

Edith Hall is Professor of Classics and Drama, Royal Holloway, and Co-Director, Archive of Performances of Greek and Roman Drama, University of Oxford.

P. J. Rhodes is Honorary Professor of Ancient History, University of Durham.