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The Cambridge Companion to Xenophon (Cambridge Companions to Literature)

The Cambridge Companion to Xenophon (Cambridge Companions to Literature)

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Cambridge University Press, 12/22/2016
EAN 9781107652156, ISBN10: 1107652154

Paperback, 544 pages, 22.7 x 15.1 x 2.7 cm
Language: English

This Companion, the first dedicated to the philosopher and historian Xenophon of Athens, gives readers a sense of why he has held such a prominent place in literary and political culture from antiquity to the present and has been a favourite author of individuals as diverse as Machiavelli, Thomas Jefferson, and Leo Tolstoy. It also sets out the major problems and issues that are at stake in the study of his writings, while simultaneously pointing the way forward to newer methodologies, issues, and questions. Although Xenophon's historical, philosophical, and technical works are usually studied in isolation because they belong to different modern genres, the emphasis here is on themes that cut across his large and varied body of writings. This volume is accessible to students and general readers, including those previously unfamiliar with Xenophon, and will also be of interest to scholars in various fields.

Introduction Michael A. Flower
Part I. Contexts
1. Xenophon and his times John W. I. Lee
2. Xenophon and Greek philosophy Louis-André Dorion
3. Xenophon and Greek political thought Sarah Brown Ferrario
4. Xenophon's place in fourth-century Greek historiography Nino Luraghi
Part II. Individual Works
5. Xenophon's Anabasis and Hellenica John Marincola
6. Xenophon's Apology and Memorabilia David M. Johnson
7. Xenophon's Symposium Gabriel Danzig
8. Xenophon's Oeconomicus Fiona Hobden
9. Xenophon's Cyropaedia
tentative answers to an enigma Melina Tamiolaki
10. Xenophon
the small works John Dillery
Part III. Techniques
11. Xenophon's language and expression Vivienne Gray
12. Xenophon's authorial voice Christopher Pelling
13. Xenophon's narrative style Tim Rood
14. The character and function of speeches in Xenophon Emily Baragwanath
Part IV. Major Subjects
15. Xenophon as a historian Michael A. Flower
16. Xenophon on leadership Richard Fernando Buxton
17. Xenophon and Athens Christopher Tuplin
18. Xenophon on Persia Kostas Vlassopoulos
19. Xenophon's views on Sparta Paul Christesen
Part V. Reception and Influence
20. Xenophon's influence in Imperial Greece Ewen Bowie
21. Xenophon and the instruction of princes Noreen Humble
22. Xenophon's changing fortunes in the modern world Tim Rood
Epilogue
23. Xenophon
magician and friend Edith Hall
Important dates in the life of Xenophon.