Tradition and Innovation in Ancient Historiography
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Köp båda 2 för 2292 krIn this volume an international group of scholars revisits the themes of John Marincola's ground-breaking Authority and Tradition in Ancient Historiography. The nineteen chapters offer a series of case studies that explore how ancient historians' ...
K. Scarlett Kingsley is an Assistant Professor of Classics at Agnes Scott College. Her research focuses on Greek historiography and philosophy, and she has published articles on Herodotus, Thucydides, and the Presocratics. She is finishing a monograph on Herodotus and intellectual culture, which was awarded a Loeb Classical Library Foundation Fellowship. Giustina Monti is Senior Lecturer in Classical Studies (Greek Culture) at the University of Lincoln. Her main research interests lie in Greek historiography, and she has published articles on Alexander the Great, Herodotus, and Polybius. She is the author of Alexander the Great. Letters: A Selection (forthcoming). Tim Rood is a Professor of Greek Literature at the University of Oxford and Fellow and Tutor in Classics at St Hugh's College. He is the author of Thucydides: Narrative and Explanation (1998); The Sea! The Sea! (2004); American Anabasis (2010); and (with Carol Atack and Tom Phillips) Anachronism and Antiquity (2020). He is also the co-editor (with Luuk Huitink) of Xenophon: Anabasis Book III for the Cambridge Greek and Latin Classics series (2019).
Introduction: the authoritative historian K. Scarlett Kingsley, Giustina Monti and Tim Rood; Part I. Myth, Fiction, and the Historian's Authority: 1. Seven types of fiction in the Greek historians Michael A. Flower; 2. Folktale and local tradition in Charon of Lampsacus Nino Luraghi; 3. Mythical and historical time in Herodotus: Scaliger, Jacoby, and the chronographic tradition Tim Rood; 4. Myth andhistoryin Livy's preface A. J. Woodman; Part II. Dislocating Authority in Herodotus'Histories: 5. Herodotus as tour guide: the autopsy motifScott Scullion; 6. Interpretive uncertainty in Herodotus'Histories Carolyn Dewald; 7. 'It is no accident that...': connectivity and coincidence in Herodotus Richard Rutherford; 8. Through barbarian eyes: non-Greeks on Greeks in Herodotus Deborah Boedeker; Part III. Performing Collective and Personal Authority; 9. Singing and dancing Pindar's authority Lucia Athanassaki; 10. Authority, experience, and the vicarious traveller in Herodotus'Histories K. Scarlett Kingsley; 11. Veni, vidi, vici: when did Roman politicians use the first-person singular? Harriet Flower; 12. Self-praise and self-presentation in Plutarch Frances B. Titchener; Part IV. Generic Transformations: 13. Thucydides' Mytilenaean debate: political philosophy or authoritative history? Paul Cartledge; 14. Tradition, innovation, and authority: Caesar's historical ambitions Kurt A. Raaflaub; 15. Tradition and authority in Philostratus'Lives of the Sophists Ewen Bowie; Part V.Innovation within Tradition: 16. 'When one assumes the ethos of writinghistory': Polybius' historiographical neologisms Giustina Monti; 17. How tradition is formed: from the fall of Caesar to the rise of Octavian Mark Toher; 18. 'Burn baby burn (discoin Furneaux)': Tacitean authority, innovation and the Neronian fire (Annals15.38-9) Rhiannon Ash; 19. The authority to be untraditional Christopher Pelling.