An eclectic Marxist approach reveals the centrality of conflict and ideological struggle in the socio-political and cultural changes in Archaic Greece.
An eclectic Marxist approach reveals the centrality of conflict and ideological struggle in the socio-political and cultural changes in Archaic Greece.
Peter W. Rose is a Professor of Classics at Miami University, Ohio. He received his Ph.D. from Harvard University, Massachusetts and taught at Yale University, Connecticut for eight years. His publications include Sons of the Gods, Children of Earth: Ideology and Literary Form in Ancient Greece (1992) and articles on Pindar, Sophocles, Homer, Marx and the Study Women in Antiquity, Thucydides, Cicero, film and pedagogy, Marxism and ideology.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction: theoretical considerations 1. Class in the Dark Age and the rise of the polis 2. Homer's Iliad: alienation from a changing world 3. Trade, colonization, and the Odyssey 4. Hesiod: Cosmogony, Basileis, farmers, and justice 5. Tyranny and the Solonian crisis 6. Sparta and the consolidation of the oligarchic ideal 7. Athens and the emergence of democracy.
Introduction: theoretical considerations 1. Class in the Dark Age and the rise of the polis 2. Homer's Iliad: alienation from a changing world 3. Trade, colonization, and the Odyssey 4. Hesiod: Cosmogony, Basileis, farmers, and justice 5. Tyranny and the Solonian crisis 6. Sparta and the consolidation of the oligarchic ideal 7. Athens and the emergence of democracy.
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