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The Mechanical Tradition of Hero of Alexandria

The Mechanical Tradition of Hero of Alexandria

The Mechanical Tradition of Hero of Alexandria

Courtney Ann Roby, Cornell University, New York
No date available
Paperback
9781009014052
Paperback

    Hero of Alexandria was a figure of great importance not only for ancient technology but also for the medieval and early modern traditions that drew on his work. In this book Courtney Roby presents Hero's key strategies for developing, solving, and contextualizing technical problems, not only in his own lifetime but as an influential tradition of creating accessible technical treatises spanning multiple disciplines. While Hero's historical biography is all but impossible to reconstruct, she examines “Hero” as a corpus, a textual tradition of technical problem-solving capable of incorporating textual transformations like interpolation, epitomization, and translation, as well as intermedial transformation from text to artifact. Key themes include ancient and early modern technical readerships, the relationship between mathematics and mechanics, the materiality of manuscript and printed texts, and the shifting cultural contexts for scientific and technical literature.

    • Situates Hero culturally through his styles of contextualizing and solving problems, since a traditional biography cannot be constructed
    • Includes several diagrams of artifacts and problems from Hero's corpus as well as extensive images from his early print tradition
    • Connects Hero's work in antiquity to the medieval and early modern traditions of work in his name

    Product details

    No date available
    Paperback
    9781009014052
    310 pages
    229 × 152 mm
    15 colour illus.

    Table of Contents

    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. Systems of Explanation
    • 3. Theorizing the World
    • 4. Hero in Context
    • 5. Hero in the Age of Print
    • Bibliography.
      Author
    • Courtney Ann Roby , Cornell University, New York

      COURTNEY ROBY is Associate Professor of Classics at Cornell University. She is also the author of Technical Ekphrasis: The Written Machine between Alexandria and Rome (Cambridge, 2016). She is the recipient of a fellowship from the Andrew W. Mellon Society of Fellows in Critical Bibliography from the University of Virginia's Rare Book School.