The third edition of Ancient Greek Civilization is a concise, engaging introduction to the history and culture of ancient Greece from the Minoan civilization to the age of the Roman Empire.
- Explores the evolution and development of Greek art, literature, politics, and thought across history, as well as the ways in which these were affected by Greek interaction with other cultures
- Now includes additional illustrations and maps, updated notes and references throughout, and an expanded discussion of the Hellenistic period
- Weaves the latest scholarship and archeological excavations into the narrative at an appropriate level for undergraduates
List of Figures vii
List of Maps xi
List of Timelines xiii
Foreword: Looking Backward xv
1 The Greeks and the Bronze Age 1
2 Iron Age Greece 29
3 The Poems of Hesiod and Homer 49
4 Poetry and Sculpture of the Archaic Period 67
5 Symposia, Seals, and Ceramics in the Archaic Period 87
6 The Birth of Philosophy and the Persian Wars 107
7 Setting the Stage for Democracy 125
8 History and Tragedy in the Fifth Century 147
9 The Peloponnesian War: A Tale of Thucydides 167
10 Stage and Law Court in Late Fifth-century Athens 191
11 The Transformation of the Greek World in the Fourth Century 211
12 Greek Culture in the Hellenistic Period 233
Afterword: Looking Forward 263
Glossary 283
Index 287
ANCIENT GREEK CIVILIZATION
Third Edition
The third edition of Ancient Greek Civilization is a concise, engaging introduction to the history and culture of ancient Greece from the Minoan civilization to the age of the Roman Empire. It explores the evolution and development of Greek art, literature, politics, and thought across history. It also examines the ways in which these aspects of Greek civilization were affected by the Greeks' interaction with and reaction against other cultures in the region.
The new edition now includes additional illustrations and maps, questions for discussion, links to internet resources, and an expanded discussion of the Hellenistic period. It weaves the latest scholarship and archaeological excavations into the narrative at an appropriate level for undergraduates. With in-depth yet accessible coverage, this is a remarkable glimpse into the world of ancient Greece for those encountering the topic for the first time.
Produktdetaljer
Biografisk notat
David Sansone is Professor Emeritus of Classics at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He is a former editor of Illinois Classical Studies, served on the editorial boards of Classical Philology and Bryn Mawr Classical Review, and was a member of the Board of Directors of the American Philological Association. While his research focuses on Greek literature of the Classical Period, his publications include work on such subjects as textual criticism, theories of the origin of sport, Bronze Age iconography, John Milton, and Richard Wagner. He is the author of Greek Athletics and the Genesis of Sport (1988), Plutarch: Lives of Aristeides and Cato (1989), and Greek Drama and the Invention of Rhetoric (Wiley Blackwell, 2012).