Greeknes and Otherness beyond the stereotype

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978-88-3613-382-6
40,00 €

Athens, Sparta, Thebes


Autore: Egidia Occhipinti
Isbn: 978-88-3613-382-6
Collana: Studi di Storia greca e romana / ISSN 2283-0804
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Athens, Sparta, Thebes

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ISBN978-88-3613-382-6
Numero in collana22
SottocategoriaLetteratura greca, Storia antica
CollanaStudi di Storia greca e romana / ISSN 2283-0804
AutoreEgidia Occhipinti
PagineXVI-380
Anno2023
In ristampaNo

This book deals with the notion of Greekness and otherness in classical times offering an innovative research perspective. It questions the reliability of the Greek-barbarian polarity, which, as is commonly believed, resulted from fifth-century BC political thought (consider historiography and tragedy). This duality is to be dismissed as a tool of enquiry, since it does not give due measure to a ‘fragmented’ society, such as the Greek. There are commonplaces about the notion of identity in ancient times, and the scholarly idea of the existence of a sharp contrast between Greeks and barbarians is often a matter of modern projections onto the past of current concerns and feelings.
The book suggests a literary and relativist approach to the issue. It wants to problematise and raise questions, moving beyond rigid interpretative schemas. Therefore, it will discuss the stereotypes that developed about people in ancient times, and which are found in classical authors (poets, historians, orators). The overturning of those stereotypes occurring within the Greek literary tradition is considered, with a special focus on authorial intention and reader response. Case studies are offered on the Athenians, Spartans, and Thebans, and their self-representation.

Egidia Occhipinti is a research fellow at the University of Palermo, where she has been carrying out a research project on the papyri of Greek historians writing on Sicily and the west Mediterranean. She teaches ‘Storia e civiltà dei Greci’ at the Kore University of Enna. Central to her interests are ancient Greek history and histo-riography, papyrology, epigraphy. She has been a Marie Curie post-doctoral Fellow at the University of Oxford, where she taught ancient history, (The End of the Peloponnesian War to the Death of Philip II of Macedon: 403 to 336 BC, Oriel College), and Honorary Visiting Fellow at the Universities of Leicester and Princeton. From her scientific production two keynote books are to be mentioned, the one is a historiographical study of a fourth-century historical work, the so-called Hellenica Oxyrhynchia, and the other is a critical edition of the same text: The Hellenica Oxyrhynchia and Historiography. New Research Perspectives (Leiden-Boston, 2016), and Elleniche di Ossirinco (Rome, 2022).