CYBER MONDAY SALE -USE CODE 25BFSALE24 AT CHECKOUT - Free Shipping on orders over $75*

CYBER MONDAY SALE

use code 25BFSALE24

Free Shipping on orders over $75*

Shop Now

This section doesn’t currently include any content. Add content to this section using the sidebar.

Image caption appears here

Add your deal, information or promotional text

Cultural Identity in the Ancient Mediterranean

Edited by Erich S. Gruen 

Cultural identity is a slippery and elusive concept. When applied to the collective self-consciousness among peoples or nations, it becomes all the more difficult to define or grasp. In recent decades scholars have focused on the "other,"—the alien, the unfamiliar, the different, perceived or conceived as the opposite—to highlight the virtues and advantages of the self. While this influential idea continues to hold sway, the time has come for a more nuanced and complex understanding of how the various societies of the ancient Mediterranean shaped their sense of identity.

The twenty-four essays in this volume examine the subject from a variety of angles. They encompass a broad range of cultures—Greek, Persian, Jewish, Phoenician, Egyptian, Roman, Gallic, and German—and an impressive array of topics. The essays attest to a diversity of attitudes toward other peoples that underscore distinctiveness or discover connectiveness or sometimes both. They show, above all, that the twists and turns that accompanied the development of a collective consciousness found no smooth path.

Erich S. Gruen is the Gladys Rehard Wood Professor Emeritus of History and Classics at the University of California, Berkeley.

544 pages
7 x 10 inches
99 b/w illustrations
13 line drawings
ISBN 978-0-89236-969-0
paperback

Getty Publications
Imprint: Getty Research Institute
Series: Issues & Debates

2011

Search