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Full Description
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
Acknowledgements, Note to the Reader, Abbreviations, Maps, General Introduction, PART I. SOURCES, Introduction to Part I, 1. Herodotus the Tourist, 2. Battle Narrative and Politics in Aeschylus' Persae, 3 Greeks and Barbarians in Euripides' Tragedies: The End of Differences?, 4. The Athenian Image of the Foreigner, PART II. THEMES, Introduction to Part II, 5. When is a Myth Not a Myth? Bernal's 'Ancient Model', 6. The Greek Notion of Dialect, 7. The Greek Attitude to Foreign Religions, PART III. PEOPLES, Introduction to Part III, 8. History and Ideology: The Greeks and 'Persian Decadence', 9. The Greeks as Egyptologists, PART IV. OVERVIEWS, Introduction to Part IV, 10. The Problem of Greek Nationality, 11. Greeks and Others: From Antiquity to the Renaissance, 12. The Construction of the 'Other', Intellectual Chronology, Guide to Further Reading, Bibliography, Index