Introducing the Ancient Greeks: From Bronze Age Seafarers to Navigators of the Western Mind
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- 8,49 €
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- 8,49 €
Publisher Description
"Wonderful…a thoughtful discussion of what made [the Greeks] so important, in their own time and in ours." —Natalie Haynes, Independent
The ancient Greeks invented democracy, theater, rational science, and philosophy. They built the Parthenon and the Library of Alexandria. Yet this accomplished people never formed a single unified social or political identity. In Introducing the Ancient Greeks, acclaimed classics scholar Edith Hall offers a bold synthesis of the full 2,000 years of Hellenic history to show how the ancient Greeks were the right people, at the right time, to take up the baton of human progress. Hall portrays a uniquely rebellious, inquisitive, individualistic people whose ideas and creations continue to enthrall thinkers centuries after the Greek world was conquered by Rome. These are the Greeks as you’ve never seen them before.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
British classicist Hall (The Return of Ulysses) has composed a panorama of two millennia of Hellenic history, depicting Greeks as sea lovers who "felt trapped when they were far inland." Starting with the Minoan and Mycenaean thalassocracies (a political system based on sea domination), Hall embarks on an odyssey toward the four long poems of Homer and Hesiod that offer "unforgettable scenes of fighting, sailing, and farming," pausing to appreciate the three essential crops "grains, vines, and olives" at the heart of Greek identity. The meandering tour features a Who's Who of Greek thinkers: scientists Thales and Anaximander; Heraclitus, first philosopher; Xenophanes of Colophon, "first skeptic"; Parmenides, founder of ontology; Zeno and his paradoxes; atomic theorist Democritus; comparative anthropologist Hecataeus; and Herodotus, historian and "Father of European Prose." Greece's "apex of creativity" in democratic Athens during the fifth and fourth centuries B.C.E. segues to the marching Argeads of Macedonia under Alexander the Great, who bequeathed his world empire "to the strongest." Hall limns how the Greeks "colonized the minds of their Roman masters," since "cultural hegemony has more lasting effects than political dominance." The prose is fluid and lambent, and though chapters are lengthy, readers will welcome the volume's accessibility. Maps & illus.