Experience and Teleology in Ancient Historiography

Experience and Teleology in Ancient Historiography
Author: Jonas Grethlein
Publsiher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 435
Release: 2013-10-17
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781107040281

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This book explores the tension in ancient historiography between teleological design and narrating the past as it was experienced by historical characters.

Aesthetic Experiences and Classical Antiquity

Aesthetic Experiences and Classical Antiquity
Author: Jonas Grethlein
Publsiher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 317
Release: 2017-11-02
Genre: Art
ISBN: 9781107192652

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This book investigates the nature of aesthetic experience with the help of ancient material, exploring our responses to both narratives and images.

Reconciling Ancient and Modern Philosophies of History

Reconciling Ancient and Modern Philosophies of History
Author: Aaron Turner
Publsiher: Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG
Total Pages: 378
Release: 2020-10-26
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9783110627305

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The distinction between ancient and modern modes of historical thought is characterized by the growing complexity of the discipline of history in modernity. Consequently, the epistemological and methodological standard of ancient historiography is typically held as inferior against the modern ideal. This book serves to address this apparent deficit. Its scope is three-fold. Firstly, it aims at encountering ancient modes of historical and historiographical thought within the province of their own horizon. Secondly, this book considers the possibility of a dialogue between ancient and modern philosophies of history concerning the influence of ancient historical thought on the development of modern philosophy of history and the utility of modern philosophy of history in the interpretation of ancient historiography. Thirdly, this book explores the continuities and discontinuities in historical method and thought from antiquity to modernity. Ultimately, this volume demonstrates the necessity of re-evaluating our assumptions about the relation of ancient and modern historical thought and lays the groundwork for a more fruitful dialogue in the future.

Experience Narrative and Criticism in Ancient Greece

Experience  Narrative  and Criticism in Ancient Greece
Author: Jonas Grethlein,Luuk Huitink,Aldo Tagliabue
Publsiher: Oxford University Press, USA
Total Pages: 353
Release: 2020-01-15
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780198848295

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Experience, Narrative, and Criticism in Ancient Greece pursues a new approach to ancient Greek narrative beyond the taxonomies of structuralist narratologies. Focusing on the phenomenal and experiential dimension of our response to narrative, it triangulates ancient narrative with ancient criticism and cognitive approaches, opening up new vistas within the study of classical literature while ably deploying the ancient material to demonstrate the value of a historical perspective for cognitive studies. Concepts such as immersion and embodiment help to establish a more comprehensive understanding of ancient narrative and ancient reading habits, as manifested in Greek criticism and rhetorical theory. The thirteen chapters presented here tackle a broad range of narrative genres, broadly understood: besides epic, historiography, and the novel, tragedy and early Christian texts are also considered alongside non-literary media, such as dance and sculpture. Authored by international specialists in the language, literature, and culture of ancient Greece, each chapter utilizes a rich set of theoretical and methodological tools drawn from cognitive studies, phenomenology, and linguistics that place them at the vanguard of a strong new current in classical scholarship and literary criticism more generally.

Knowing Future Time In and Through Greek Historiography

Knowing Future Time In and Through Greek Historiography
Author: Alexandra Lianeri
Publsiher: Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG
Total Pages: 450
Release: 2016-03-07
Genre: History
ISBN: 9783110430820

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From the early modern period, Greek historiography has been studied in the context of Cicero's notion historia magistra vitae and considered to exclude conceptions of the future as different from the present and past. Comparisons with the Roman, Judeo-Christian and modern historiography have sought to justify this perspective by drawing on a category of the future as a temporal mode that breaks with the present. In this volume, distinguished classicists and historians challenge this contention by raising the question of what the future was and meant in antiquity by offering fresh considerations of prognostic and anticipatory voices in Greek historiography from Herodotus to Appian and by tracing the roots of established views on historical time in the opposition between antiquity and modernity. They look both at contemporary scholarly argument and the writings of Greek historians in order to explore the relation of time, especially the future, to an idea of the historical that is formulated in the plural and is always in motion. By reflecting on the prognostic of historical time the volume will be of interest not only to classical scholars, but to all who are interested in the history and theory of historical time.

Anatomies of the Gospels and Beyond

Anatomies of the Gospels and Beyond
Author: Anonim
Publsiher: BRILL
Total Pages: 521
Release: 2019-01-28
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9789004373501

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The twenty-five essays of Anatomies of the Gospels and Beyond are offered by internationally recognized New Testament scholars to honor the deep and broad legacy of R. Alan Culpepper by presenting a snapshot of current research in the field.

Interpreting Herodotus

Interpreting Herodotus
Author: Thomas Harrison,Elizabeth K. Irwin
Publsiher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 444
Release: 2018
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780198803614

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Developing the themes and ideas of Charles W. Fornara's seminal publication Herodotus: An Interpretative Essay (Oxford, 1971), this volume offers a new look at the Histories in light of the explosion of scholarship in the intervening years, focusing particularly on how we can interpret Herodotus' work in terms of the context in which he wrote.

After the Crisis Remembrance Re anchoring and Recovery in Ancient Greece and Rome

After the Crisis  Remembrance  Re anchoring and Recovery in Ancient Greece and Rome
Author: Jacqueline Klooster,Inger N.I. Kuin
Publsiher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages: 280
Release: 2020-02-06
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781350128569

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Crises resulting from war or other upheavals turn the lives of individuals upside down, and they can leave marks on a community for many years after the event. This volume aims to explore how such crises were remembered in the ancient world, and how communities reconstituted themselves after a crisis. Can crises serve as catalysts for innovation or change, and how does this work? What do crises reveal about the 'normality' against which they are defined and framed? People living in post-crisis societies have no choice but to adapt to the changes caused by crisis. Such adaptation entails the question of how the relationship between the pre-crisis situation and the new status quo is constructed, and by whom. Due to the reduced possibility of using the immediate past, which is tainted by conflict and bad memories, it may involve revisions of historical narratives about communal pasts and identities, through the selection of new 'anchors', and sometimes even a discarding of the old ones. Crises affect all areas of life, and crisis recovery likewise spans different spheres. This volume finds traces of such recovery strategies in texts as well as visual representations; in literary as well as in documentary texts; in official ideology as much as in subaltern responses. The contributors bring together the diverse testimonies for such ways of coping that have survived from antiquity.