Space, Place, and Landscape in Ancient Greek Literature and Culture
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Space, Place, and Landscape in Ancient Greek Literature and Culture
About This Book
This book brings together a collection of original essays that engage with cultural geography and landscape studies to produce new ways of understanding place, space, and landscape in Greek literature from the fifth and fourth centuries BCE. The authors draw on an eclectic collection of contemporary approaches to bring the study of ancient Greek literature into dialogue with the burgeoning discussion of spatial theory in the humanities. The essays in this volume treat a variety of textual spaces, from the intimate to the expansive: the bedroom, ritual space, the law courts, theatrical space, the poetics of the city, and the landscape of war. And yet, all of the contributions are united by an interest in recuperating some of the many ways in which the ancient Greeks in the archaic and classical periods invested places with meaning and in how the representation of place links texts to social practices.
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Table of contents
- Cover
- Half-title
- Title page
- Copyright information
- Table of contents
- List of contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 Pindarâs Delphi
- 2 Space and Landscape in Xenophonâs Anabasis
- 3 In the Bedroom: Interior Space in Herodotusâ Histories
- 4 Ships, Walls, Men: Classical Athens and the Poetics of Infrastructure
- 5 Corinth, Courtesans, and the Politics of Place
- 6 Mapping Literary Styles in Aristophanesâ Frogs
- 7 The Permeable Spaces of the Athenian Law-Court
- Index