The Emptiness of Asia: Aeschylus' 'Persians' and the History of the Fifth Century

Couverture
Bloomsbury Academic, 24 août 2000 - 240 pages

This is a literary study of Aeschylus' Persians alongside Herodotus' Histories, which offers a comprehensive understanding what actually happened at the battle of Salamis and afterwards. Thomas Harrison examines the political and ideological motivating factors underpinning Persai in the context of the times.

Aeschylus’ Persians is not only the first surviving Greek drama. It is also the only tragedy to take for its subject historical rather than mythical events: the repulse of the army of Xerxes at Salamis in 480 B.C. It has frequently been mined for information on the tactics of Salamis or the Greeks’ knowledge of Persian names or institutions, but it also has a broader value, one that has not often been realised. What does it tell us about Greek representations of Persia, or of the Athenians’ self-image? What can we glean from it of the politics of early fifth-century Athens, or of the Athenians’ conception of their empire? How, if at all, can such questions be approached without doing violence to the Persians as a drama? What are the implications of the play for the nature of tragedy?

À l'intérieur du livre

Table des matières

Acknowledgements
9
The use and abuse of Persia
51
Where is Athens?
58
Droits d'auteur

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À propos de l'auteur (2000)

Thomas Harrison is Professor of Ancient History at the University of St Andrews, UK. His publications includeDivinity and History: the religion of Herodotus (2000), and as editor Greeks and Barbarians (2002) and the Edinburgh Companion to Ancient Greece and Rome (2006).

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