This is a stimulating volume, which raises important questions.
Greece & Rome
The volume edited by Kosmin and Moyer offers an excellent and indispensable starting point for future studies dealing with the topic of resistance to Hellenistic monarchies and their hegemonic aspirations.
Lorenzo Paoletti, GNOMON
This collaborative volume examines revolts and resistance to the successor states, formed after Alexander the Great's conquest of the Persian empire, as a transregional phenomenon. The editors have assembled an array of specialists in the study of the various regions and cultures of the Hellenistic world - Judea, Egypt, Babylonia, Central Asia, and Asia Minor - in an effort to trace comparisons and connections between episodes and modes of resistance. The volume seeks to unite the currently dominant social-scientific orientation to ancient resistance and revolt with perspectives, often coming from religious studies, that are more attentive to local cultural, religious, and moral frameworks. In re-assessing these frameworks, contributors move beyond Greek/non-Greek binaries to examine resistance as complex and entangled: acts and articulations of resistance are not purely nativistic or 'nationalist', but conditioned by local traditions of government, historical memories of prior periods, as well as emergent transregional Hellenistic political and cultural idioms.
Cultures of Resistance in the Hellenistic East is organized into three parts. The first part investigates the Great Theban Revolt and the Maccabean Revolt, the central cases for large, organized, and prolonged military uprisings against the Hellenistic kingdoms. The second part examines the full gamut of indigenous self-assertion and resistant action, including theologies of monarchic inadequacy, patterns of historical periodization and textual interpretation, and claims to sites of authority. The volume's final part turns to the more ambiguous assertions of local autonomy and identity that emerge in the frontier regions that slipped in and out of the grasp of the great Hellenistic powers.
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This volume examines revolts and resistance to the successor states, formed after Alexander the Great's conquest of the Persian empire, as a transregional phenomenon. Featuring specialists in Judaea, Egypt, Babylonia, Central Asia, and Asia Minor, in an effort to trace comparisons and connections between episodes and modes of resistance.
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Preface
Paul J. Kosmin and Ian S. Moyer: Introduction
Part I. The Big Events: Pattern and Crisis.
1: Erich Gruen: The Maccabean Model: Resistance or Adjustment?
2: Anne-Emmanuelle Veïsse: The 'Great Theban Revolt', 206-186 BCE
Part II. The Grounds for Resistance.
3: Johannes Haubold: Memory and Resistance in the Seleucid World: The Case of Babylon
4: Kathryn Stevens: 'After him a king will arise': Framing Resistance in Seleucid Babylonia
5: Sylvie Honigman: Diverging Memories, Not Resistance Literature: The Maccabean Crisis in the Animal Apocalypse and 1 and 2 Maccabees
6: Ian S. Moyer: Revolts, Resistance, and the Materiality of the Moral Order in Ptolemaic Egypt
Part III. The Edges of Resistance.
7: Laurent Capdetrey: An Impossible Resistance? Anatolian Populations, Ethnicity, and Greek Powers in Asia Minor during the Second Century BCE
8: Daniel Tober: 'Herakles is stronger, Seleukos': Local History and Local Resistance in Pontic Herakleia
9: Rachel Mairs: Central Asian Challenges to Seleucid Authority: Synchronism, Correlation, and Causation as Historiographical Devices in Justin's Epitome of Trogus
Abbreviations
Bibliography
Index
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Paul J. Kosmin read Ancient and Modern History at Balliol College, Oxford, and took his PhD in Ancient History at Harvard University, where he is now Philip J. King Professor of Ancient History. The core of his work to date has focused on the political, cultural, and intellectual history of the east Mediterranean and west Asia in the Hellenistic period. Ian S. Moyer studied Classics at the University of Victoria, and completed his PhD in the Committee on the
Ancient Mediterranean World at the University of Chicago. He now teaches in the History Department at the University of Michigan, and his research traces political, cultural, and intellectual interactions
between Egypt and the ancient Greek world.
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Broad comparative and connective view of revolt and resistance in Hellenistic East
Renewed attention to the roles of both indigenous and cosmopolitan cultural traditions in articulating resistance
Essays by leading scholars on revolts and resistance in the Hellenistic world
Multiple regions/locations in the Hellenistic world: Judaea, Anatolia, Babylonia, Egypt, Bactria
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780192863478
Publisert
2022
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press
Vekt
514 gr
Høyde
224 mm
Bredde
147 mm
Dybde
23 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
320