Share the story of what Open Access means to you
University of Michigan needs your feedback to better understand how readers are using openly available ebooks. You can help by taking a short, privacy-friendly survey.
Our Ancient Wars: Rethinking War through the Classics
Victor Caston and Silke-Maria Weineck, editors
You don't have access to this book. Please try to log in with your institution.
Log in
Many famous texts from classical antiquity—by historians like Thucydides, tragedians like Sophocles and Euripides, the comic poet Aristophanes, the philosopher Plato, and, above all, Homer—present powerful and profound accounts of wartime experience, both on and off the battlefield. These texts also provide useful ways of thinking about the complexities and consequences of wars throughout history, and the concept of war broadly construed, providing vital new perspectives on conflict in our own era.
Our Ancient Wars features essays by top scholars from across academic disciplines—classicists and historians, philosophers and political theorists, literary scholars, some with firsthand experience of war and some without—engaging with classical texts to understand how differently they were read in other times and places. Contributors articulate difficult but necessary questions about contemporary conceptions of war and conflict.
Contributors include Victor Caston, Page duBois, Susanne Gödde, Peter Meineck, Sara Monoson, David Potter, Kurt Raaflaub, Arlene Saxonhouse, Seth Schein, Nancy Sherman, Hans van Wees, Silke-Maria Weineck, and Paul Woodruff.
-
Cover
-
Title
-
Copyright
-
Contents
-
Introduction
-
Part I: Rethinking the Ancient, in View of the Modern
-
Genocide in Archaic and Classical Greece
-
Lysistrata and War’s Impact on the Home Front
-
“War Guilt,” “National Character,” “Inevitable Forces,” and the Problematic Historiography of “Unnecessary Wars”
-
Socrates’ Military Service
-
-
Part II: Rethinking the Modern, in View of the Ancient
-
Moral Injury, Damage, and Repair
-
War as Education
-
Deciding to Go to War: Who Is Responsible?
-
Combat Trauma and the Tragic Stage: Ancient Culture and Modern Catharsis?
-
-
Part III: Other Moderns, Other Ancients
-
“War, What Is It Good For?” in Homer’s Iliad and Four Receptions
-
Modern Achilles: The Beauty of War and the Battle of the Sexes
-
“I Am Spartacus”: Ancient War and Slavery in the Movies
-
Epilogue: Distances
-
-
Contributors
-
Notes
-
Index
Citable Link
Published: 2016
Publisher: University of Michigan Press
- 978-0-472-07298-9 (hardcover)
- 978-0-472-12159-5 (ebook)
- 978-0-472-05298-1 (paper)