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Ancient Greek Civilization

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Ancient Greek Civilization

Von: Jeremy McInerney, The Great Courses
Gesprochen von: Jeremy McInerney PhD University of California at Berkeley
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Über diesen Titel

Clearly, the Greeks are a source of much that we esteem in our own culture: democracy, philosophy, tragedy, epic and lyric poetry, history-writing, our aesthetic sensibilities, ideals of athletic competition, and more. But what is it about Hellenic culture that has made generations of influential scholars and writers view it as the essential starting point for understanding the art and reflection that define the West? This series of 24 lectures by an accomplished Greek scholar and teacher traces the complex web of links between the present and its Mediterranean origins, taking you from the Late Bronze Age up to the time of Philip II of Macedon and his son Alexander the Great. It's an intellectual journey that lets you see ancient Greek civilization in the light shed by the newest and best research and criticism, expanding your understanding of history, literature, art, philosophy, religion, and more.

With a special focus on the two crucial centuries from 600-400 B.C.-the era of the Persian and Peloponnesian wars and of classical Athens as described in the histories of Herodotus and Thucydides and the philosophic dialogues of Plato-you'll come to understand how the uniquely "Greek" identity was forged, and how it gave root to so much of what we consider vital about our own present day. Just as important, you'll learn how the differences between our own modern values and beliefs and those of the Hellenic world-including slavery and the exclusion of women from public life-do not imply a lack of relevance to our own times but can instead teach us as just much as our affinities.

PLEASE NOTE: When you purchase this title, the accompanying reference material will be available in your Library section along with the audio.

©1998 The Teaching Company, LLC (P)1998 The Great Courses
Antike

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Am relevantesten
This was now my fourth lecture for the "Great Courses" Series. And as expected, neither the lecture nor it's contents disappointed me in any way.

By matter of topic the story starts with Doric migration into greece, continues over Minoan and Mycenian Civilization and then reaches out over Archaic and Classical Greece. Alexander The Great and the Hellenism close this lecture.

Not only contains this course the usual facts and facets of early greek political history, it also gives an outlook onto constitutional developments, including in Athens and Sparta.

Yet, Political history is just a small part of a nation's historical perspective. So this lecture also summarizes the social components surrounding the greek City States. What was the role of the women? How was life as a slave? How did ancient family life looked like? Here, the narrator, Jeremy McInerney, follows a very neutralist point of view, following Von Ranke's perspective: "Describe a historical setting or society, but do not judge it"

Another big plus for me in this lesson was that the narrator also added an extended outlook on Socrates and the greek philosophy, as well as an overview over homeric literature.

So far I have to say thank you for the great work as well as for sharing your lectures.

Great Lecture

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