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Class in Archaic Greece

Class in Archaic Greece

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Peter W. Rose
Cambridge University Press, 12/13/2012
EAN 9780521768764, ISBN10: 0521768764

Hardcover, 450 pages, 23 x 15.4 x 3.4 cm
Language: English

Archaic Greece saw a number of decisive changes, including the emergence of the polis, the foundation of Greek settlements throughout the Mediterranean and Black Sea, the organization of panhellenic games and festivals, the rise of tyranny, the invention of literacy, the composition of the Homeric epics and the emergence of lyric poetry, the development of monumental architecture and large scale sculpture, and the establishment of 'democracy'. This book argues that the best way of understanding them is the application of an eclectic Marxist model of class struggle, a struggle not only over control of agricultural land but also over cultural ideals and ideology. A substantial theoretical introduction lays out the underlying assumptions in relation to alternative models. Material and textual remains of the period are examined in depth for clues to their ideological import, while later sources and a wide range of modern scholarship are evaluated for their explanatory power.

Introduction
theoretical considerations
1. Class in the Dark Age and the rise of the polis
2. Homer's Iliad
alienation from a changing world
3. Trade, colonization, and the Odyssey
4. Hesiod
Cosmogony, Basileis, farmers, and justice
5. Tyranny and the Solonian crisis
6. Sparta and the consolidation of the oligarchic ideal
7. Athens and the emergence of democracy.