From the Iliad to Aristophanes, from the gospel of Matthew to
Augustine, Greek and Latin texts are constellated with descriptive
images of dreams. Some are formulaic, others intensely vivid. The
best ancient minds Plato, Aristotle, the physician Galen, and
others struggled to understand the meaning of dreams.
With "Dreams and Experience in Classical Antiquity" the renowned
ancient historian William Harris turns his attention to oneiric
matters. This cultural history of dreams in antiquity draws on both
contemporary post-Freudian science and careful critiques of the
ancient texts. Harris traces the history of characteristic forms of
dream-description and relates them both to the ancient experience
of dreaming and to literary and religious imperatives. He analyzes
the nuances of Greek and Roman belief in the truth-telling
potential of dreams, and in a final chapter offers an assessment of
ancient attempts to understand dreams naturalistically.
How did dreaming culture evolve from Homer s time to late
antiquity? What did these dreams signify? And how do we read and
understand ancient dreams through modern eyes? Harris takes an
elusive subject and writes about it with rigor and precision,
reminding us of specificities, contexts, and changing attitudes
through history.
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