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Ancient Ethnography: New Approaches

Editat de Eran Almagor, Joseph Skinner
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 23 apr 2015
Ethnographic writing has become all but ubiquitous in recent years. Although now considered a thoroughly modern and increasingly indispensable field of study, Ethnography's roots go all the way back to antiquity. This volume brings together eleven original essays exploring the wider intellectual and cultural milieux from which ancient ethnography arose, its transformation and development in antiquity, and the way in which 19th century receptions of ethnographic traditions helped shape the modern study of the ancient world. Finally, it addresses the extent to which all these themes remain inextricably intertwined with shifting and often highly contested notions of culture, power and identity. Its chapters deal with the origins of the term 'barbarian', the role of ethnography in Tacitus' Germania, Plutarch's Lives, Xenophon's Anabasis, and Athenaeus' Deipnosophistae, Herodotean storytelling, Henry and George Rawlinson, and Megasthenes' treatise on India.

At a time when modern ethnographies are becoming increasingly prevalent, wide-ranging, and experimental in their approach to describing cultural difference, this book encourages us to think about ancient ethnography in new and interesting ways, highlighting the wealth of material available for study and the complexities underpinning ancient and modern notions of what it meant to be Greek, Roman or 'barbarian'.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781474234764
ISBN-10: 1474234763
Pagini: 296
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 16 mm
Greutate: 0.42 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom

Cuprins

Introduction
Eran Almagor and Joseph Skinner

Part 1: Beginnings
The Invention of the 'Barbarian' in Late 6th Century BC
Ionia Hyun Jin Kim (University of Sydney, Australia)

The Stories of the Others: Storytelling and Inter-cultural Communication in the Herodotean Mediterranean
Kostas Vlassopoulos (University of Nottingham, UK)

Part 2: Responses
Looking at the Other: Visual Mediation and Greek Identity in Xenophon's Anabasis
Rosie Harman (University College London, UK)

Apologetic Ethnography: Megasthenes' Indica and the Seleucid Elephant
Paul J. Kosmin (Harvard University, USA)

Monstrous Aetolians and Aetolian Monsters - A Politics of Ethnography?
Jacek Rzepka (Warsaw University, Poland)

Part 3: Transformations
Ethnography and the Gods in Tacitus' Germania
Greg Woolf (University of St. Andrews, UK)

'But This Belongs to Another Discussion': Ethnographic Digressions in Plutarch
Eran Almagor (Ben Gurion University of the Negev, Israel)

Ethnography and Authorial Voice in Athenaeus' Deipnosophistae
Katerina Oikonomopoulou (University of Patras, Greece)

Part 4: Receptions
Imperial Visions, Imagined Pasts: Ethnography and Identity on India's North-Western Frontier
Joseph Skinner (University of Newcastle, UK)

Exploring Virgin Fields: Henry and George Rawlinson on Ancient and Modern Orient
Thomas Harrison (University of Liverpool, UK)

The Scope of Ancient Ethnography
Emma Dench (Harvard University, USA)

Index

Recenzii

This rich and inspiring new collection of articles, counting among its contributors the foremost scholars on ancient ethnographical writing, is a timely demonstration of the state of research in a field which is not only naturally diverse in subject matter, but also undergoing some very significant realignments.
This carefully-edited and well-compiled collection is borne by a fascination with ancient ethnography.