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Experience and Teleology in Ancient Historiography: Futures Past from Herodotus to Augustine

Experience and Teleology in Ancient Historiography: Futures Past from Herodotus to Augustine

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Jonas Grethlein
Cambridge University Press, 10/17/2013
EAN 9781107040281, ISBN10: 1107040280

Hardcover, 431 pages, 23 x 16 x 2.8 cm
Language: English

The past is narrated in retrospect. Historians can either capitalize on the benefit of hindsight and give their narratives a strongly teleological design or they may try to render the past as it was experienced by historical agents and contemporaries. This book explores the fundamental tension between experience and teleology in major works of Greek and Roman historiography, biography and autobiography. The combination of theoretical reflections with close readings yields a new, often surprising assessment of the history of ancient historiography as well as a deeper understanding of such authors as Thucydides, Tacitus and Augustine. While much recent work has focused on how ancient historians use emplotment to generate historical meaning, Experience and Teleology in Ancient Historiography offers a new approach to narrative form as a mode of coming to grips with time.

Introduction
futures past
historiography between experience and teleology
Part I. Experience
Making the Past Present
1. Thucydides, The History of the Peloponnesian War
2. Xenophon, Anabasis
3. Plutarch, Alexander
4. Tacitus, Annals
Part II. Teleology
The Power of Retrospect
5. Herodotus, Histories
6. Polybius, Histories
7. Sallust, Bellum Catilinae
Part III. Beyond Experience and Teleology
8. Augustine, Confessions
Epilogue
experience in modern historiography.