ISBN : 9780199587575
Herodotus' Histories is a fascinating account of the interactions between the Greeks and their powerful Near-Eastern neighbours. In it he explores the long-term causes for the Persian invasions of Greece in the early fifth century BCE, a momentous event both for the development of Greek civilization and for the beginnings of historiography, and traces the rise of the Persians as rulers of a large multi-ethnic empire whose lands and cultures are vividly described. This first surviving history is a tapestry of brilliant and entertaining narratives, but it also addresses profoundly serious concerns, such as the advantages and failings of different forms of government, the role of religion and morality in public life, and encounters with different cultures. This collection - the first of two volumes - is dedicated to the historical component of the Histories and includes important previously published essays, some translated into English for the first time, which discuss Herodotus' historical method, sources, narrative art, literary antecedents, intellectual background, and political ideology. The introduction contains an account of Herodotus' life and times, as well as a survey of recent scholarship designed as a guide for contextualizing the selected articles according to the range of approaches they represent.
INTRODUCTION
ANTECEDENTS, SOURCES, CREDIBILITY, AND HISTORIE
1. The Place of Herodotus in the History of Historiography
2. Herodotus and His Contemporaries
HERODOTUS AND ORAL TRADITION
3. The stories before the Histories: Folktale and Traditional Narrative in Herodotus
4. Oral Tradition in Herodotus
5. Herodotus and Delphic Traditions about Croesus
CAUSATION, PATTERNING, AND THE MEANING OF HISTORY
6. Aspects of Historical Causation in Herodotus
7. Herodotean Historiographical Patterning: the Constitutional Debate
8. Herodotean Kings and Historical Inquiry
NARRATOLOGY
9. Narratological Aspects of the Histories of Herodotus
THE USES OF HISTORY
10. Herodotus and Periclean Athens
11. Herodotus Perspective
12. Herodotus and the Athenian Arche
LOOK AT HIS END
13. Protesilaos and the End of Herodotus Histories
14. Wanton Kings, Pickled Heroes, and Gnomic Founding Fathers: Strategies of Meaning at the End of Herodotus' Histories
BIBLIOGRAPHY OF WORKS CITED
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
INDEX