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This volume commemorates the 65th birthday of William Vernon Harris
(on September 13, 2003), when a group of his former students agreed
to honor him with a collection of essays that would represent the
wide variety of interests and influences of our advisor and friend.
The fifteen papers in fact range chronologically from the first
Olympics to late antiquity and discuss various questions of
imperialism, law, economy, and religion in the ancient
Mediterranean world. The essays share a social historical
perspective from which they challenge as many commonly accepted
notions in ancient history. The contributors acknowledge their
intellectual debt to the formative scholarly acumen of William V.
Harris, which adds up to the "tall order" of engaging with his
work.
How to Do Things with History is a collection of essays that
explores current and future approaches to the study of ancient
Greek cultural history. Rather than focus directly on methodology,
the essays in this volume demonstrate how some of the most
productive and significant methodologies for studying ancient
Greece can be employed to illuminate a range of different kinds of
subject matter. These essays, which bring together the work of some
of the most talented scholars in the field, are based upon papers
delivered at a conference held at Cambridge University in September
of 2014 in honor of Paul Cartledge's retirement from the post of A.
G. Leventis Professor of Ancient Greek Culture. For the better part
of four decades, Paul Cartledge has spearheaded intellectual
developments in the field of Greek culture in both scholarly and
public contexts. His work has combined insightful historical
accounts of particular places, periods, and thinkers with a
willingness to explore comparative approaches and a keen focus on
methodology. Cartledge has throughout his career emphasized the
analysis of practice - the study not, for instance, of the history
of thought but of thinking in action and through action. The
assembled essays trace the broad horizons charted by Cartledge's
work: from studies of political thinking to accounts of legal and
cultural practices to politically astute approaches to
historiography. The contributors to this volume all take the
parameters and contours of Cartledge's work, which has profoundly
influenced an entire generation of scholars, as starting points for
their own historical and historiographical explorations. Those
parameters and contours provide a common thread that runs through
and connects all of the essays while also offering sufficient
freedom for individual contributors to demonstrate an array of rich
and varied approaches to the study of the past.
This book explores the relationship between sport and
democratization. Drawing on sociological and historical
methodologies, it provides a framework for understanding how sport
affects the level of egalitarianism in the society in which it is
played. The author distinguishes between horizontal sport, which
embodies and fosters egalitarian relations, and vertical sport,
which embodies and fosters hierarchical relations. Christesen also
differentiates between societies in which sport is played and
watched on a mass scale and those in which it is an ancillary
activity. Using ancient Greece and nineteenth-century Britain as
case studies, Christesen analyzes how these variables interact and
finds that horizontal mass sport has the capacity to both promote
and inhibit democratization at a societal level. He concludes that
horizontal mass sport tends to reinforce and extend
democratization.
This book is a comprehensive examination of Olympic victor lists.
The origins, development, content, and structure of Olympic victor
lists are explored and explained, and a number of important
questions, such as the source and reliability of the year of 776
for the first Olympics, are addressed. Olympic victor lists emerge
as a clearly defined type of literature that is best understood as
a group of closely related texts. This book offers a fresh
perspective on works by familiar writers such as Diodorus Siculus
and a sense of the potential importance of less-well-known authors
such as Phlegon of Tralleis.
This book is a comprehensive examination of Olympic victor lists.
The origins, development, content, and structure of Olympic victor
lists are explored and explained, and a number of important
questions, such as the source and reliability of the year of 776
for the first Olympics, are addressed. Olympic victor lists emerge
as a clearly defined type of literature that is best understood as
a group of closely related texts. This book offers a fresh
perspective on works by familiar writers such as Diodorus Siculus
and a sense of the potential importance of less-well-known authors
such as Phlegon of Tralleis.
From the informal games of Homer's time to the highly organized
contests of the Roman world, Miller has compiled a trove of ancient
sources: Plutarch on boxing, Aristotle on the pentathlon,
Philostratos on the buying and selling of victories, Vitruvius on
literary competitions, and Xenophon on female body building. Arete
offers readers an absorbing lesson in the culture of Greek
athletics from the greatest of teachers, the ancients themselves,
and demonstrates that the concepts of virtue, skill, pride, valor,
and nobility embedded in the word arete are only part of the story
from antiquity. This bestselling volume on the culture of Greek
athletics is updated with a new preface by leading scholar Paul
Christesen that discusses the book's continued importance for
students of ancient athletics.
A Cultural History of Sport in Antiquity covers the period 800 BCE
to 600 CE. From the founding of the Olympics and Rome's celebratory
games, sport permeated the cultural life of Greco-Roman antiquity
almost as it does our own. Gymnasiums, public baths, monumental
arenas, and circuses for chariot racing were constructed, and
athletic contests proliferated. Sports-themed household objects
were very popular, whilst the exploits of individual athletes,
gladiators, and charioteers were immortalized in poetry, monuments,
and the mosaic floors of the wealthy. This rich sporting culture
attests to the importance of leisure among the middle and upper
classes of the Greco-Roman world, but by 600 CE rising costs,
barbarian invasions, and Christianity had swept it all away. The 6
volume set of the Cultural History of Sport presents the first
comprehensive history from classical antiquity to today, covering
all forms and aspects of sport and its ever-changing social,
cultural, political, and economic context and impact. The themes
covered in each volume are the purpose of sport; sporting time and
sporting space; products, training and technology; rules and order;
conflict and accommodation; inclusion, exclusion and segregation;
minds, bodies and identities; representation. Paul Christesen is
Professor at Dartmouth College, USA. Charles Stocking is Associate
Professor at Western University, Canada. Volume 1 in the Cultural
History of Sport set General Editors: Wray Vamplew, Mark Dyreson,
and John McClelland
In June 2014, to mark the appearance of volume 25 of the journal
NIKEPHOROS, a conference was held in Graz on the theme of sport in
antiquity. It documented, through the work of 32 established and
young scholars from Denmark, Germany, Greece, Great Britain, Italy,
Canada, Croatia, The Netherlands, the USA and Austria, both the
current interest in the theme of ancient sports and the increasing
awareness of the importance of this specific aspect of culture in
researching more general historical questions. The papers from the
conference are published in edited form in volumes 27 and 28 of
NIKEPHOROS.
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