
Charles W. Fornara's Herodotus: An Interpretative Essay (oxford, 1971) Was A Landmark Publication In The Study Of The Great Greek Historian. Well-known In Particular For Its Main Thesis That The Histories Should Be Read Against The Background Of The Atheno-peloponnesian Wars During Which It Was Written, Its Insight And Penetrating Discussion Extend To A Range Of Other Issues, From The Relative Unity Of Herodotus' Work And The Relationship Between His Ethnographies And Historical Narrative, To The Themes And Motifs That Criss-cross The Histories And How 'history Became Moral And Herodotus Didactic'. Interpreting Herodotus Brings Together A Team Of Leading Herodotean Scholars To Look Afresh At The Themes Of Fornara's Seminal Essay In The Light Of The Explosion Of Scholarship On The Histories In The Intervening Years, Focusing Particularly On How We Can Interpret Herodotus' Work In Terms Of The Context In Which He Wrote. What Does It Mean To Talk Of The Unity Of The Histories, Or Herodotus' 'moral' Purpose? How Can We Reconstruct The Context In Which The Histories Were Written And Published? And In What Sense Might The Histories Constitute A 'warning' For His Own, Or For Subsequent, Generations? In Developing And Interrogating Fornara's Influential Ideas For A New Generation Of Scholars, The Volume Not Only Asserts Their Enduring Value To Scholarship, But Also Offers A Wealth Of Insights And New Perspectives On The 'father Of History' That Attests To The Vibrancy And Diversity Of Contemporary Engagement With Herodotus.
This volume investigates the enduring validity of Charles W. Fornara's interpretive framework regarding Herodotus' Histories, specifically questioning how modern scholarship reconciles the text's moral purpose and unity with its historical context. Editors Elizabeth Irwin and Thomas C. Harrison assemble a cohort of prominent classicists to re-examine the relationship between the Histories and the socio-political climate of the Atheno-Peloponnesian Wars. The contributors analyze how contemporary research has evolved since the 1971 publication of Fornara's seminal essay, providing a rigorous reassessment of Herodotus as both a historian and a didactic moralist.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this volume as a critical engagement with the historiographical legacy of Charles W. Fornara. Scholars frequently note the academic density of the prose, identifying it as a sophisticated resource for those already familiar with the complexities of Herodotean studies.
Page Count:
436
Publication Date:
2018-01-01
ISBN-10:
0192525530
ISBN-13:
9780192525536
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