Forever Young: Why Cambridge has a Professor of Greek Culture
The text of this inaugural lecture proposes that the newly established A. G. Leventis Professorship of Greek Culture is a new kind of chair: a chair not only for research but also for outreach, for the advancement of the public understanding of ancient Greek culture. After explaining its origins, and pondering the possible meanings of the Professorship's title, it seeks to explore four 'myths' about the ancient Greeks and their culture (or cultures), myths deliberately chosen to illustrate the huge range of the Hellenic tradition that is still actively at work in our own culture. These are: i. that there was an entity called 'Ancient Greece'; ii. that the ancient Greeks were technologically backward; iii. that the ancient Greeks really were (or looked) anything like they are depicted in such movies as 300; and iv. that the Greeks invented democracy in anything like the form in which we understand it today.
- First inaugural lecture delivered for the newly established A. G. Leventis Professorship of Greek Culture
- Illustrates the huge and diverse range of Hellenic tradition still actively at work today
- Addresses four key 'myths' about Ancient Greece still widely adhered to
Product details
December 2009Paperback
9780521121729
36 pages
186 × 123 mm
0.04kg
Available
Table of Contents
- Forever Young: Why Cambridge has a Professor of Greek Culture.