Advances new ideas about why the human urge to make myths persists across the millennia and why the borderland between mythology and history can sometimes be hard to map
"I hadn't, till I really started digging, gauged the fierce intensity of the need for myth in the human psyche, of any age, or sensed the variety of motives dictating that need," writes Peter Green in the introduction to this wide-ranging collection of essays on classical mythology and the mythic experience. Using the need for myth as the starting point for exploring a number of topics in Greek mythology and history, Green advances new ideas about why the human urge to make myths persists across the millennia and why the borderland between mythology and history can sometimes be hard to map.
Green looks at both specific problems in classical mythology and larger theoretical issues. His explorations underscore how mythic expression opens a door into non-rational and quasi-rational modes of thought in which it becomes possible to rewrite painful truths and unacceptable history-which is, Green argues, a dangerous enterprise. His study of the intersections between classical mythology and Greek history ultimately drives home a larger point, "the degree of mythification and deception (of oneself no less than of others) of which the human mind is capable."
"The essays in this volume supply sumptuous mezes to give you an appetite to fill your belly with the classics. All are informed by knoweldge not only of the canonical texts but, it seems, of almost every scrap of un-golden age scribble that might be useful to Green's unflagging
purpose. . . . a classical education in itself."--CULTURE supplement to the SUNDAY TIMES, 14 November 2004
"Green presents to historians, philosophers, and students of literature generally the reflections of a robust, generous, wonderfully learned, opinionated, personally involved, unfailingly interesting monitor of western civilization past and present." Alan L. Boegehold, Professor Emeritus of Classics, Brown University
". . . it is undeniable that few scholars have made such an effort to allow the Greeks
and Romans to speak for themselves; even fewer have been blessed with such a
good ear for the rhetoric of self-delusion. . . The enviable scholarly range Green
demonstrates in this volume is representative of his enormously diverse oeuvre,
which covers classical and Hellenistic history as well as translations of Apollonius,
Ovid and Juvenal. . . What loosely connects the seventeen revised essays and
reviews in this volume . . . is a historically contextualizing but imaginative approach
to ancient thought, especially mythology. Almost all the essays emphasize Green's
conviction that myths are more significant than historical narratives."-Edith Hall,
Times Literary Supplement, February 11 2005
"
Content:
Introduction; 1. "These Fragments Have I Shored against My Ruins": Apollonius Rhodius and the Social Revalidation of Myth for a New Age; 2. The Flight-Plan of Daedalus; 3. Works and Days 1\-285: Hesiod's Invisible Audience; 4. Athenian History and Historians in the Fifth Century B.C.; 5. The Metamorphosis of the Barbarian: Athenian Panhellenism in a Changing World; 6. Text and Context in the Matter of Xenophon's Exile; 7. Rebooking the Flute-Girls: A Fresh Look at the Chronological Evidence for the Fall of Athens and the Eight-Month Rule of the Thirty; 8. A Variety of Greek Appetites; 9. Alexander's Alexandria; 10. The Muses' Birdcage, Then and Now; 11. How Political Was the Stoa?; 12. Ancient Ethics, Modern Therapy; 13. Getting to Be a Star: The Politics of Catasterism; 14. The Innocence of Procris: Ovid A.A. 3. 687\-746; 15. Magic and the Principle of Apparent Causality in Pliny's Natural History
Appendix A. Tanglewood Tales for the Yuppies; Appendix B. Homer for the Kiddies
"I hadn't, till I really started digging, gauged the fierce intensity of the need for myth in the human psyche, of any age, or sensed the variety of motives dictating that need," writes Peter Green in the introduction to this wide-ranging collection of essays on classical mythology and the mythic experience. Using the need for myth as the starting point for exploring a number of topics in Greek mythology and history, Green advances new ideas about why the human urge to make myths persists across the millennia and why the borderland between mythology and history can sometimes be hard to map.
Green looks at both specific problems in classical mythology and larger theoretical issues. His explorations underscore how mythic expression opens a door into non-rational and quasi-rational modes of thought in which it becomes possible to rewrite painful truths and unacceptable history-which is, Green argues, a dangerous enterprise. His study of the intersections between classical mythology and Greek history ultimately drives home a larger point, "the degree of mythification and deception (of oneself no less than of others) of which the human mind is capable."
"The essays in this volume supply sumptuous mezes to give you an appetite to fill your belly with the classics. All are informed by knoweldge not only of the canonical texts but, it seems, of almost every scrap of un-golden age scribble that might be useful to Green's unflagging
purpose. . . . a classical education in itself."--CULTURE supplement to the SUNDAY TIMES, 14 November 2004
"Green presents to historians, philosophers, and students of literature generally the reflections of a robust, generous, wonderfully learned, opinionated, personally involved, unfailingly interesting monitor of western civilization past and present." Alan L. Boegehold, Professor Emeritus of Classics, Brown University
". . . it is undeniable that few scholars have made such an effort to allow the Greeks
and Romans to speak for themselves; even fewer have been blessed with such a
good ear for the rhetoric of self-delusion. . . The enviable scholarly range Green
demonstrates in this volume is representative of his enormously diverse oeuvre,
which covers classical and Hellenistic history as well as translations of Apollonius,
Ovid and Juvenal. . . What loosely connects the seventeen revised essays and
reviews in this volume . . . is a historically contextualizing but imaginative approach
to ancient thought, especially mythology. Almost all the essays emphasize Green's
conviction that myths are more significant than historical narratives."-Edith Hall,
Times Literary Supplement, February 11 2005
"
Content:
Introduction; 1. "These Fragments Have I Shored against My Ruins": Apollonius Rhodius and the Social Revalidation of Myth for a New Age; 2. The Flight-Plan of Daedalus; 3. Works and Days 1\-285: Hesiod's Invisible Audience; 4. Athenian History and Historians in the Fifth Century B.C.; 5. The Metamorphosis of the Barbarian: Athenian Panhellenism in a Changing World; 6. Text and Context in the Matter of Xenophon's Exile; 7. Rebooking the Flute-Girls: A Fresh Look at the Chronological Evidence for the Fall of Athens and the Eight-Month Rule of the Thirty; 8. A Variety of Greek Appetites; 9. Alexander's Alexandria; 10. The Muses' Birdcage, Then and Now; 11. How Political Was the Stoa?; 12. Ancient Ethics, Modern Therapy; 13. Getting to Be a Star: The Politics of Catasterism; 14. The Innocence of Procris: Ovid A.A. 3. 687\-746; 15. Magic and the Principle of Apparent Causality in Pliny's Natural History
Appendix A. Tanglewood Tales for the Yuppies; Appendix B. Homer for the Kiddies