Tales of the Barbarians: Ethnography and Empire in the Roman West

Tales of the Barbarians: Ethnography and Empire in the Roman West

by Greg Woolf
Tales of the Barbarians: Ethnography and Empire in the Roman West

Tales of the Barbarians: Ethnography and Empire in the Roman West

by Greg Woolf

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Overview

Tales of the Barbarians traces the creation of new mythologies in the wake of Roman expansion westward to the Atlantic, and offers the first application of modern ethnographic theory to ancient material.
  • Investigates the connections between empire and knowledge at the turn of the millennia, and the creation of new histories in the Roman West
  • Explores how ancient geography, local histories and the stories of wandering heroes were woven together by Greek scholars and local experts
  • Offers a fresh perspective by examining  passages from ancient writers in a new light

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781444390803
Publisher: Wiley
Publication date: 12/01/2010
Series: Blackwell-Bristol Lectures on Greece, Rome and the Classical Tradition
Sold by: JOHN WILEY & SONS
Format: eBook
Pages: 176
File size: 399 KB

About the Author

Greg Woolf is Professor of Ancient History at the University of St. Andrews. He is the author of Becoming Roman: The Origins of Provincial Civilization in Gaul (1998), as well as the co-editor of Literacy and Power in the Ancient World (1994), and Rome the Cosmopolis (2003).  In addition, Professor Woolf is editor of the Journal of Roman Studies and has written numerous articles on Roman history.

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Table of Contents

Translations Used.

Introduction.

Chapter 1. Telling Tales on the Middle Ground.

Chapter 2. Explaining the Barbarians.

Chapter 3.Ethnography and Empire.

Chapter 4. Enduring Fictions?

Notes.

References.

General Index.

Index of Main Passages Discussed.

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

"Greg Woolf's wide-ranging and engaging study of ethnographic traditions about the "barbarian" west exposes the complex mixture of myth, stereotype, and information deriving from the interplay between inquirers and inhabitants and from the shifting circumstances that generated their creation and their transformation."
Erich Gruen, University of California, Berkeley

“Woolf dissects Greek and Roman ethnological accounts to give a voice to the otherwise silent people Rome conquered and analyses the role of myths in empire building.”
David Breeze, The University of Edinburgh

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