Historical Agency and the ‘Great Man' in Classical Greece
The 'great man' of later Greek historical thought is the long product of traceable changes in ancient ideas about the meaning and impact of an individual life. At least as early as the birth of the Athenian democracy, questions about the ownership of the motion of history were being publicly posed and publicly challenged. The responses to these questions, however, gradually shifted over time, in reaction to historical and political developments during the fifth and fourth centuries BC. These ideological changes are illuminated by portrayals of the roles played by individuals and groups in significant historical events, as depicted in historiography, funerary monuments, and inscriptions. The emergence in these media of the individual as an indispensable agent of history provides an additional explanation for the reception of Alexander 'the Great': the Greek world had long since been prepared to understand him as it did.
- Presents a nuanced interpretation of the spread of ideas that is not confined to the upper socio-economic classes
- Discusses a wide variety of ancient evidence, both literary and non-literary
- Demonstrates that the explosive reception of Alexander the Great was deeply rooted in well over a century of ancient Greek experience and imagination
Product details
September 2014Adobe eBook Reader
9781316056370
0 pages
0kg
This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.
Table of Contents
- 1. The search for the 'great man'
- 2. Man, myth, and memory under the early Athenian democracy
- 3. Culture clash? Reading individuals and groups in the Histories of Herodotus
- 4. Claims to immortality: memories of the Peloponnesian War
- 5. Learning one's limits, knowing one's place
- 6. Out beyond Athens
- 7. A 'new world order'?
- 8. Alexander 'the Great'
- 9. Conclusion.