Greeks and BarbariansThomas Harrison Routledge, 2018 M01 15 - 288 pages Greeks and Barbarians examines ancient Greek conceptions of the "other." The attitudes of Greeks to foreigners and there religions, and cultures, and politics reveals as much about the Greeks as it does the world they inhabited. Despite occasional interest in particular aspects of foreign customs, the Greeks were largely hostile and dismissive viewing foreigners as at best inferior, but more often as candidates for conquest and enslavement. |
Contents
General Introduction | 1 |
3 the Staatliche Kunstsammlungen Dresden fig 4 the Museum | 3 |
of Fine Arts Boston fig 5 the Archaeological Institute of | 14 |
Introduction to Part I | 17 |
vii | 54 |
The Athenian Image of the Foreigner | 107 |
Contents | 119 |
Introduction to Part II | 127 |
The Greek Notion of Dialect | 169 |
Introduction to Part III | 189 |
The Greeks as Egyptologists 2 II | 211 |
Introduction to Part IV 23 I | 231 |
From Antiquity to the Renaissance | 257 |
I2 The Construction of the Other | 278 |
Intellectual Chronology 3 II | 311 |
328 | |
When is a Myth Not a Myth? Bernals Ancient Model | 133 |
meticulous editing to the copyeditor Fiona Sewell and to John | 147 |
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Common terms and phrases
Achaemenid Aeschylus Agamemnon Amazons ancient Antiquity argument Aristotle Athenaeus Athenian Athens Attic Aulis Bacchae Bacchants Barbarians Barbarians in Euripides barbaric Bernal Black Athena Byzantine Cadmus civilisation classical concept context contrast Ctesias cult customs Cyrus Darius Dionysus Doric Egypt Egyptian emphasises empire Emptiness of Asia ethnic ethnographic ethnography Euripides example fact fifth century foreign gods Greece Greek cities Greek dialects Greek history Greek Nationality Greek world Greeks and Barbarians Harrison Hellas Hellenic Hellenistic Heracles hero Herodotus historian hoplite identity Inventing the Barbarian Iphigenia Isocrates king koine language linguistic Lissarrague Menelaus myth mythical nomoi nomos non-Greek Orestes oriental origin Overviews panhellenic Paris Pelasgians Persian Wars Phoenician Women Phrygian Plato polis political Problem of Greek refer religion Roman sacrifice Scythians slaves Sources Spartans speak speech story Synodinou Thebes Themes theory Thracian Thucydides tradition tragedy Trojan Xenophon Xerxes Zeus