After the Crisis: Remembrance, Re-anchoring and Recovery in Ancient Greece and Rome
Editat de Dr Jacqueline Klooster, Dr Inger N.I. Kuinen Limba Engleză Paperback – 25 aug 2021
Toate formatele și edițiile | Preț | Express |
---|---|---|
Paperback (1) | 218.54 lei 6-8 săpt. | +71.82 lei 6-12 zile |
Bloomsbury Publishing – 25 aug 2021 | 218.54 lei 6-8 săpt. | +71.82 lei 6-12 zile |
Hardback (1) | 598.84 lei 6-8 săpt. | |
Bloomsbury Publishing – 5 feb 2020 | 598.84 lei 6-8 săpt. |
Preț: 218.54 lei
Preț vechi: 275.36 lei
-21% Nou
Puncte Express: 328
Preț estimativ în valută:
41.82€ • 45.57$ • 35.24£
41.82€ • 45.57$ • 35.24£
Carte tipărită la comandă
Livrare economică 24 aprilie-08 mai
Livrare express 19-25 martie pentru 81.81 lei
Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76
Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781350193680
ISBN-10: 1350193682
Pagini: 280
Ilustrații: 12 bw illus
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.39 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1350193682
Pagini: 280
Ilustrații: 12 bw illus
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.39 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
Presents the innovative research from the project "Anchoring Innovation" (http://www.ru.nl/oikos/anchoring-innovation/anchoring-innovation)
Notă biografică
Jacqueline Klooster is Assistant Professor of Ancient Greek Literature at the University of Groningen, The Netherlands. Her publications include Poetry as Window and Mirror: Positioning the Poet in Hellenistic Poetry (2011), The Ideologies of Lived Space in Literature, Ancient and Modern (with Jo Heirman, 2013), Homer and the Good Ruler: The Reception of Homeric Epic as Princes' Mirror (with B. van den Berg, 2018).Inger N.I. Kuin is Assistant Professor of Classics, General Faculty, at the University of Virginia, USA. Her publications include Strategies of Remembering in Greece under Rome (100 BC-100 AD) (with T.M. Dijkstra, M. Moser, and D. Weidgenannt, 2017), as well as several articles on imperial Greek literature and Latin epigraphy.
Cuprins
AcknowledgementsPart I: Crisis: Concepts & Ideology 1) Introduction: What is a Crisis? Framing versus ExperienceJacqueline Klooster (University of Groningen, Netherlands) and Inger Kuin (Dartmouth College, USA) 2) (Not) talkin' bout a revolution: Managing constitutional crisis in Athenian political thoughtTim Whitmarsh (University of Cambridge, UK) 3) Security: calming the soul political in the wake of civil warMichèle Lowrie (University of Chicago, USA) Part II: Crisis Traumas & Recovery: Greece 4) Tragedies of War in Duris and Phylarchus: social memory and experiential historyLisa Hau (Glasgow University, UK) 5) Changes of Fortune: Polybius and the Transformation of GreeceAndrew Erskine (Edinburgh University, UK) Part III: Crisis Traumas & Recovery: Rome 6) Coping With Crisis: Sulla's Civil War and Roman Cultural IdentityAlexandra Eckert (Oldenburg University, Germany) 7) Alternative Futures in Lucan's Bellum Civile: Imagining Aftermaths of Civil WarAnnemarie Ambühl (Mainz University, Germany) Part IV: Resolving Civil War 8) Caesar and the Crisis of CorfiniumLuca Grillo (University of North Carolina, USA) 9) Young Caesar and the Termination of Civil War (31-27 BCE)Carsten Hjort Lange (Aalborg University, Denmark) 10) Agrippa's odd Speech in Cassius Dio's Roman HistoryMathieu de Bakker (University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands) Part IV: Civil War & the Family 11) The Fate of the Lepidani: Civil War and Family History in First Century BCE RomeJosiah Osgood (Georgetown University, USA) 12) The Roman Family as Institution and Metaphor After the Civil WarsAndrew Gallia (University of Minnesota, USA)NotesBibliographyIndex
Recenzii
The volume as a whole came together well and the contributions not only interact with one another, but also individually tend to advance the discussion. As a result it is certain to stimulate further work. This volume elegantly deals with the topic of crisis and its sequel in a coherent and insightful manner that makes it extremely useful for courses and seminars at the graduate and post-graduate level. With its focus on the political and socio-cultural trauma of civil war and conquest, this volume constitutes a significant contribution to trauma and memory studies.
Crisis, in the everyday political, cultural and social sense by which it is understood by many today, is a modern invention. The choice to utilise such a weighty and irreducible concept to read events of the Classical past is a welcome one, as the ubiquity of trouble and trauma in Greco-Roman history justifies continuous comprehensive attention with a view to understanding pivotal events as public and/or private crises ... Klooster and Kuin, along with their contributors, adopt an appropriately modern approach to the concept.
This is a fine volume, well worth reading and as attractive for its insights into ancient communities as it is for the connections it inevitably stimulates with our own contemporary crises.
The volume's greatest strength is the quality of the individual contributions; every chapter is well-written and cogently argued, and they all make significant interventions in the specific topics they investigate. Another major contribution of the volume is that it is one of the opening salvos in what we might call an affective turn in the study of the ancient world. A key theme that many of the chapters touch on is that history functions as a site not just for critical engagement with the past but for emotional engagement with it as well ... To summarize, Klooster and Kuin's volume represents an important contribution to the study of classics and ancient history. As mentioned above, many of the individual chapters will become essential works in their particular subfields.
A highly impressive collection of scholarship by leading experts that reminds us in the modern world, that antiquity too was characterised by crises, yet, despite the marks such challenges leave, crises must necessarily pass, communities can recover and they do reconstitute themselves.
Crisis, in the everyday political, cultural and social sense by which it is understood by many today, is a modern invention. The choice to utilise such a weighty and irreducible concept to read events of the Classical past is a welcome one, as the ubiquity of trouble and trauma in Greco-Roman history justifies continuous comprehensive attention with a view to understanding pivotal events as public and/or private crises ... Klooster and Kuin, along with their contributors, adopt an appropriately modern approach to the concept.
This is a fine volume, well worth reading and as attractive for its insights into ancient communities as it is for the connections it inevitably stimulates with our own contemporary crises.
The volume's greatest strength is the quality of the individual contributions; every chapter is well-written and cogently argued, and they all make significant interventions in the specific topics they investigate. Another major contribution of the volume is that it is one of the opening salvos in what we might call an affective turn in the study of the ancient world. A key theme that many of the chapters touch on is that history functions as a site not just for critical engagement with the past but for emotional engagement with it as well ... To summarize, Klooster and Kuin's volume represents an important contribution to the study of classics and ancient history. As mentioned above, many of the individual chapters will become essential works in their particular subfields.
A highly impressive collection of scholarship by leading experts that reminds us in the modern world, that antiquity too was characterised by crises, yet, despite the marks such challenges leave, crises must necessarily pass, communities can recover and they do reconstitute themselves.