Bibliographic Information

The Greeks

edited by Jean-Pierre Vernant ; translated by Charles Lambert and Teresa Lavender Fagan

University of Chicago Press, 1995

  • : pbk

Other Title

L'uomo greco

Available at  / 13 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Originally published as L'uomo greco, c1991

Description and Table of Contents

Volume

ISBN 9780226853826

Description

Who or what is referred to do by the term "ancient Greek"? A person from the Archaic period? The war hero celebrated by Homer? Or the fourth century BC "political animal" described by Aristotle? This work explores what it meant to be Greek during the classical period of Greek civilization. It offers portraits of typical Greek personages from regions such as Athens, Sparta, Arcadia, Thessaly, Epirus, the city-states of Asia Minor and the colonies of the Black Sea, southern Italy and Sicily. Looking at the citizen, the religious believer, the soldier, the servant, the peasant and others, the text analyzes what - in relationships with the divine, with nature, with others and with the self - made the Greek "different" in ways of acting, thinking and feeling.

Table of Contents

Translators' Note Introduction Jean-Pierre Vernant 1: The Economist Claude Mosse 2: War and Peace Yvon Garlan 3: Becoming an Adult Giuseppe Cambiano 4: The Citizen Luciano Canfora 5: Homo Domesticus James Redfield 6: Spectator and Listener Charles Segal 7: Forms of Sociality Oswyn Murray 8: The Greeks and Their Gods Mario Vegetti 9: The Rustic Philippe Borgeaud Index
Volume

: pbk ISBN 9780226853833

Description

Who or what is referred to do by the term "ancient Greek"? A person from the Archaic period? The war hero celebrated by Homer? Or the fourth century BC "political animal" described by Aristotle? This work explores what it meant to be Greek during the classical period of Greek civilization. It offers portraits of typical Greek personages from regions such as Athens, Sparta, Arcadia, Thessaly, Epirus, the city-states of Asia Minor and the colonies of the Black Sea, southern Italy and Sicily. Looking at the citizen, the religious believer, the soldier, the servant, the peasant and others, the text analyzes what - in relationships with the divine, with nature, with others and with the self - made the Greek "different" in ways of acting, thinking and feeling.

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