The Muse of History: The Ancient Greeks from the Enlightenment to the Present

$28.85
by Oswyn Murray

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A Times Literary Supplement Best Book of the Year How the modern world understood the ancient Greeks and why they matter today. “This majestic book by Oswyn Murray has been long and eagerly awaited…and its quality and scope exceed expectations.” ―Edith Hall, BBC History Magazine The study of ancient Greece has been central to Western conceptions of history since the Renaissance. The Muse of History traces the shifting patterns of this preoccupation in the last three centuries, in which successive generations have reinterpreted the Greeks in the light of their contemporary worlds. Thus, in the eighteenth century, the conflict between Athens and Sparta became a touchstone in the development of republicanism, and in the nineteenth, Athens came to represent the democratic ideal. Amid the ideological conflicts of the twentieth century, the Greeks were imagined in an age of suffering, inspiring defenses against nationalism, Nazism, communism, and capitalism. Oswyn Murray draws powerful conclusions from this historiography, using the ever-changing narrative of ancient Greece to illuminate grand theories of human society. Analyzing the influence of historians and philosophers including Hegel, Burckhardt, Nietzsche, and Braudel, Murray also considers how coming generations might perceive the Greeks. Along the way, The Muse of History offers rare behind-the-scenes glimpses of figures who shaped the study of ancient Greece, some devotedly cited to this day and others forgotten. We sit in on a class with Arnaldo Momigliano; meet Moses Finley after his arrival in England; eavesdrop on Paul Veyne, Jean-Pierre Vernant, and Pierre Vidal-Naquet; and rediscover Michel Foucault. A thrilling work that rewrites established scholarly traditions and locates important ideas in unexpected places, The Muse of History reminds us that the meaning of the past is always made in and for the present. “Elegant and outspoken…[this book] is…a tribute to its writer, who has been one of the most thoughtful ancient historians in Britain over more than half a century.” ― Mary Beard , Times Literary Supplement “This majestic book by Oswyn Murray has been long and eagerly awaited…and its quality and scope exceed expectations…What makes this book so timely is its publication at a moment when democracies are under such great pressure.” ― Edith Hall , BBC History Magazine “[Provides] a vast understanding of how a memory of antiquity, always renewed and reinterpreted, has kept us civilized.” ― Robert D. Kaplan , Wall Street Journal “Shot through with joy, significance, wit, and inspiration…provides a bright, even blazing account of ancient Greek historiography from the Scottish Enlightenment to the twenty-first century…[this] book is as wise and munificent in spirit as any that I have read.” ― Richard Davenport-Hines , Times Literary Supplement “In…[this book], the culmination of a distinguished career that has spanned six decades, Murray surveys the ways that European historians since the Enlightenment have used ancient Greece as a lens through which to view their own political landscapes. More surprisingly, he intersperses these analyses with personal reminiscences that read like passages from a memoir…[his] determined sleuthing into scholarship’s obscure corners is one of this volume’s most appealing features.” ― James Romm , Chronicle of Higher Education “ The Muse of History is a magisterial and deeply humane testament to the virtues of intellectual open-mindedness, studded with personal anecdotes from a lifetime of scholarship…It remains stubbornly anti-parochial and is characterised by a salutary breadth of vision and a welcome hostility to the often unexamined assumptions of Anglo-Saxon empiricism.” ― Henry Day , The Literary Review “It is rare that one wants to ascribe beauty to a book by an academic, but this is no academic book (despite being a product of deep scholarship). It is the work of a true lover of his subject, an uomo universale who deserves to speak on behalf of a great cause that is constantly endangered but must never be lost: the cosmopolitan Republic of Letters.” ― Daniel Johnson , The Critic “Murray does a service to his field of Greek history by showing how this subject is, and will always be, relevant to the times…[this book] presents far more than just ancient Greece; instead, it offers a much wider historiography, adding to its educational and entertaining qualities…engaging and lively.” ― Robert S. Davis , New York Journal of Books “A learned, humane, and occasionally moving intellectual memoir.” ― Spencer A. Klavan , Law & Liberty “An invaluable reminder of how much all modern humanists owe to European scholars of the classical world, from the French érudits of the eighteenth century to the eastern European Marxists of the twentieth. Oswyn Murray, a foremost historian of western antiquity, here combines trenchant historiographical analysis with biographical snapshots

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