Antiquity and We (original) (raw)

A Handbook to Classical Reception in Eastern and Central Europe

Handbooks to Classical Reception This series offers comprehensive, thought-provoking surveys of the reception of major classical authors and themes. These Handbooks will consist of approximately 30 newly written essays by leading scholars in the field, and will map the ways in which the ancient world has been viewed and adapted up to the present day. Essays are meant to be engaging, accessible, and scholarly pieces of writing, and are designed for an audience of advanced undergraduates, graduates, and scholars.

A. F. Basson and W. J. Dominik (eds), Literature, Art, History: Studies on Classical Antiquity and Tradition. In Honour of W. J. Henderson. Frankfurt/Berlin/Bern/Brussels/New York/Oxford/Vienna: Peter Lang 2003. ISBN 3-631-36837-2; US ISBN 0-8204-4806-0. Pp. xi + 355.

This volume explores selected topics on classical antiquity and tradition in the areas of Latin literature (classical, postclassical and medieval), Greek literature (classical and Hellenistic), art and history. The essays treat key texts and cultural phenomena from Homer to the fifth century AD. A wide variety of critical approaches are employed to challenge orthodoxies and to present fresh perspectives on the literature, art and history of classical antiquity. Newly emerging areas of inquiry are treated in addition to canonical texts and the views of both established international scholars and young voices in the discipline are represented. A recurrent motif of the volume emerges in the interpretive benefits of combining philological acumen with theoretical and intertextual considerations. Chapters are by G. Arnott (Leeds), B. Baldwin (Calgary), A. Basson (Buffalo, New York), L. Cilliers (Orange Free State), K. Coleman (Harvard), P. Conradie (Stellenbosch), W. Dominik (Otago), R. Evans (South Africa), E. Fantham (Princeton), S. Farron (Witwatersrand), K. Galinsky (Texas), B. Gentili and Liana Lomiento (Urbino), D. Gerber (Western Ontario), A. Gosling (Natal), J. Hale (Kentucky), S. Harrison (Oxford), J. Hilton (Natal), D. Konstan (Brown), M. Lambert (Natal), B. Levick (Oxford), A. Mackay (Auckland), B. Martin (Pretoria), G. Maurach (Braunschweig), P. Murgatroyd (McMaster), I. Ronca (Pontificium Institutum Altioris Latinitatis), D. Saddington (Witwatersrand), H. Sivan (Kansas), P. Tennant (Natal), B. van Zyl Smit (Western Cape), R. Whitaker (Cape Town).

Introduction Reading Late Antiquity.pdf

The field of Late Antique studies has involved self-reflexion and criticism since its emergence in the late nineteenth century, but in recent years there has been a widespread desire to retrace our steps more systematically and to inquire into the millennial history of previous interpretations, historicization and uses of the end of the Greco-Roman world. This volume contributes to that enterprise. It emphasizes an aspect of Late Antiquity reception that ensues from its subordination to the Classical tradition, namely its tendency to slip in and out of western consciousness. Narratives and artifacts associated with this period have gained attention, often in times of crisis and change, and exercised influence only to disappear again. When later readers have turned to the same period and identified with what they perceive, they have tended to ascribe the feeling of relatedness to similar values and circumstances rather than to the formation of an unbroken tradition of appropriation.

New Perspectives on Late Antiquity in the Eastern Roman Empire

2014

The present volume presents some of the latest research trends in the study of Late Antiquity in the Eastern Roman Empire from a multi-disciplinary perspective, encompassing not only social, economic and political history, but also philology, philosophy and legal history. The volume focuses on the interaction between the periphery and the core of the Eastern Empire and the relations between Eastern Romans and Barbarians in different geographical areas, during the approximate millennium that elapsed between the Fall of Rome and the Fall of Constantinople, with special attention paid to the earlier period. By introducing the reader to some innovative and ground-breaking new theories, the contributors to the present volume, an attractive combination of leading scholars in their respective fields and young researchers with innovative ideas, offer a fresh and thought-provoking examination of Byzantium during Late Antiquity and beyond.