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SOLON D'ATHÈNES : POÈTE, PHILOSOPHE, SOLDAT, HOMME D'ÉTAT par Ron Owens - NEUF

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Caractéristiques de l'objet

État
Bon état
Livre ayant déjà été lu, mais qui est toujours en bon état. La couverture présente des dommages mineurs, comme des éraflures, mais n'est ni trouée ni déchirée. Pour les couvertures rigides, la jaquette n'est pas nécessairement incluse. La reliure présente des marques d'usure mineures. La majorité des pages sont intactes. Pliures et déchirures mineures. Soulignement de texte mineur au crayon. Aucun surlignement de texte. Aucune note dans les marges. Aucune page manquante. Consulter l'annonce du vendeur pour avoir plus de détails et voir la description des défauts. Afficher toutes les définitions des étatsla page s'ouvre dans une nouvelle fenêtre ou un nouvel onglet
Commentaires du vendeur
“Has some wear, but is still very readable.”
ISBN
9781845194031

À propos de ce produit

Product Identifiers

Publisher
Liverpool University Press
ISBN-10
1845194039
ISBN-13
9781845194031
eBay Product ID (ePID)
80076627

Product Key Features

Book Title
Solon of Athens : Poet, Philosopher, Soldier, Statesman
Number of Pages
386 Pages
Language
English
Publication Year
2010
Topic
Philosophers, Ancient / Greece, History & Surveys / Ancient & Classical, Poetry, Literary, Political, Ancient & Classical
Genre
Literary Criticism, Philosophy, Biography & Autobiography, History
Type
Textbook
Author
Ron Owens
Format
Hardcover

Dimensions

Item Height
1.1 in
Item Weight
28.2 Oz
Item Length
9.9 in
Item Width
7 in

Additional Product Features

Intended Audience
Trade
LCCN
2009-048707
Dewey Edition
22
Reviews
"The figure of Solon is central to all accounts of the very birth of western democracy. He was also an accomplished thinker and poet, important to any account of the birth of Greek intellectual life and culture. His life was complex, and his name legendary within a very short time. … Politically, Solon was a figure to whose authority every Athenian democrat wanted to be able to appeal. The technique of making spurious reference to Solon's democratic thought became a part of the new political armory in late fifth century Athens, and is mocked by Aristophanes in the Clouds, when reintroducing Pheidippides after his sophistic studies. He is selected, alongside Lycurgus, at the high-point of Plato's Symposium as somebody who engendered laws far finer than any human progeny could. While there was considerable debate about how natural or artificial law of any kind might be, lawgiving was in any case highly thought of, often as a supremely rational or god-given activity. … As a poet his early impact is attested again by Plato, when his character 'Critias' introduces the Atlantis story. Critias' grandfather had supposedly said that 'because they were new at that time many of us boys (scere at the feast of the Apaturia) recited the poems of Solon' (21b). Chronology remains hazy, as the identity of Plato's 'Critias' and the dramatic date of the dialogue itself remain hazy, but one message is still clear: the admiration for, and classic status of, Solon's poetry came early. As a result of this classic status, at least at Athens, he would become a central part of Athenian consciousness and cultural identity. A poet's status in ancient Greece was generally bound up with the perception that they had something valuable to say, either for the individual or for the community at large. Solon therefore played a part in moral and intellectual life for several generations. The artificial divisions that have separated him off from the Presocratic Philosophers have more to do with Aristotle than with any lack of perceived connection between moral principles and universal forces, either on Solon's part or on the part of the canonical Presocratics. Political and cosmic forces were repeatedly joined together in the same discourse, and in classical Athens neither were seen as beyond the reach of the common man. Hence, in spite of the much-discussed 'ancient quarrel between philosophy and poetry' Solon's poetry had a special part to play in the development of philosophy at Athens. … Dr. Ron Owens has, for many years, persisted with the study of all aspects of this remarkable man, and his dedication has been rewarded by numerous and important insights that help one to read the poems through the history and the man through the poems. I am delighted, therefore, that this useful volume presents to us a biography in several chapters, an edition of the poems in Greek and English, and a wealth of additional material, including vocabulary, concordance, glossary of Greek terms, bibliography, and index. This makes it an exceptionally well-equipped piece of work, and shows the seriousness with which the task has been taken. I see a wide range of uses for this volume, and it deserves a correspondingly wide readership." -From the Foreword, Prof. Harold Tarrant, University of Newcastle, Australia, "The figure of Solon is central to all accounts of the very birth of western democracy. He was also an accomplished thinker and poet, important to any account of the birth of Greek intellectual life and culture. His life was complex, and his name legendary within a very short time. ... Politically, Solon was a figure to whose authority every Athenian democrat wanted to be able to appeal. The technique of making spurious reference to Solon's democratic thought became a part of the new political armory in late fifth century Athens, and is mocked by Aristophanes in the Clouds, when reintroducing Pheidippides after his sophistic studies. He is selected, alongside Lycurgus, at the high-point of Plato's Symposium as somebody who engendered laws far finer than any human progeny could. While there was considerable debate about how natural or artificial law of any kind might be, lawgiving was in any case highly thought of, often as a supremely rational or god-given activity. ... As a poet his early impact is attested again by Plato, when his character 'Critias' introduces the Atlantis story. Critias' grandfather had supposedly said that 'because they were new at that time many of us boys (scere at the feast of the Apaturia) recited the poems of Solon' (21b). Chronology remains hazy, as the identity of Plato's 'Critias' and the dramatic date of the dialogue itself remain hazy, but one message is still clear: the admiration for, and classic status of, Solon's poetry came early. As a result of this classic status, at least at Athens, he would become a central part of Athenian consciousness and cultural identity. A poet's status in ancient Greece was generally bound up with the perception that they had something valuable to say, either for the individual or for the community at large. Solon therefore played a part in moral and intellectual life for several generations. The artificial divisions that have separated him off from the Presocratic Philosophers have more to do with Aristotle than with any lack of perceived connection between moral principles and universal forces, either on Solon's part or on the part of the canonical Presocratics. Political and cosmic forces were repeatedly joined together in the same discourse, and in classical Athens neither were seen as beyond the reach of the common man. Hence, in spite of the much-discussed 'ancient quarrel between philosophy and poetry' Solon's poetry had a special part to play in the development of philosophy at Athens. ... Dr. Ron Owens has, for many years, persisted with the study of all aspects of this remarkable man, and his dedication has been rewarded by numerous and important insights that help one to read the poems through the history and the man through the poems. I am delighted, therefore, that this useful volume presents to us a biography in several chapters, an edition of the poems in Greek and English, and a wealth of additional material, including vocabulary, concordance, glossary of Greek terms, bibliography, and index. This makes it an exceptionally well-equipped piece of work, and shows the seriousness with which the task has been taken. I see a wide range of uses for this volume, and it deserves a correspondingly wide readership." --From the Foreword, Prof. Harold Tarrant, University of Newcastle, Australia, "The figure of Solon is central to all accounts of the very birth of western democracy. He was also an accomplished thinker and poet, important to any account of the birth of Greek intellectual life and culture. His life was complex, and his name legendary within a very short time. ... Politically, Solon was a figure to whose authority every Athenian democrat wanted to be able to appeal. The technique of making spurious reference to Solon's democratic thought became a part of the new political armory in late fifth century Athens, and is mocked by Aristophanes in the Clouds, when reintroducing Pheidippides after his sophistic studies. He is selected, alongside Lycurgus, at the high-point of Plato's Symposium as somebody who engendered laws far finer than any human progeny could. While there was considerable debate about how natural or artificial law of any kind might be, lawgiving was in any case highly thought of, often as a supremely rational or god-given activity. ... As a poet his early impact is attested again by Plato, when his character 'Critias' introduces the Atlantis story. Critias' grandfather had supposedly said that 'because they were new at that time many of us boys (scere at the feast of the Apaturia) recited the poems of Solon' (21b). Chronology remains hazy, as the identity of Plato's 'Critias' and the dramatic date of the dialogue itself remain hazy, but one message is still clear: the admiration for, and classic status of, Solon's poetry came early. As a result of this classic status, at least at Athens, he would become a central part of Athenian consciousness and cultural identity. A poet's status in ancient Greece was generally bound up with the perception that they had something valuable to say, either for the individual or for the community at large. Solon therefore played a part in moral and intellectual life for several generations. The artificial divisions that have separated him off from the Presocratic Philosophers have more to do with Aristotle than with any lack of perceived connection between moral principles and universal forces, either on Solon's part or on the part of the canonical Presocratics. Political and cosmic forces were repeatedly joined together in the same discourse, and in classical Athens neither were seen as beyond the reach of the common man. Hence, in spite of the much-discussed 'ancient quarrel between philosophy and poetry' Solon's poetry had a special part to play in the development of philosophy at Athens. ... Dr. Ron Owens has, for many years, persisted with the study of all aspects of this remarkable man, and his dedication has been rewarded by numerous and important insights that help one to read the poems through the history and the man through the poems. I am delighted, therefore, that this useful volume presents to us a biography in several chapters, an edition of the poems in Greek and English, and a wealth of additional material, including vocabulary, concordance, glossary of Greek terms, bibliography, and index. This makes it an exceptionally well-equipped piece of work, and shows the seriousness with which the task has been taken. I see a wide range of uses for this volume, and it deserves a correspondingly wide readership." From the Foreword, Prof. Harold Tarrant, University of Newcastle, Australia
Dewey Decimal
938/.02092 B
Table Of Content
Introduction; Politics, Money & Justice; Political History; The Crisis; Early Life, Appointment & Commission; Poetry, Morality & Philosophy; Solon's Reforms; Indices; Greek Index; Name & Place Index; General Index.
Synopsis
Addresses the historical, social and political contexts within which Solon of Athens instituted wide-ranging reforms to the Athenian constitution (594-93 BCE), the impact of those reforms on the political self-awareness of the archaic Athenians themselves, and the ethical and political philosophies that drove reform., This book addresses the historical, social and political contexts within which Solon of Athens instituted wide-ranging reforms to the Athenian constitution (594-93 BCE), the impact of those reforms on the growing political self-awareness of the archaic Athenians themselves, and the developing ethical and political philosophies that drove reform. It also provides, for the first time in 90 years, a detailed and comprehensive commentary on each of the 43 extant fragments of Solon's poetry. In the light of modern scholarship, Ron Owens sets out the story of Solon's life, and examines the nature of the entrenched and threatening political and economic crisis which led to his appointment to high political office; he discusses the manner and consequences of his appointment; seeks to identify both the underlying causes of the crisis and the general outlines of the reform measures adopted by Solon; and explores both the philosophy and the concept of justice' that appears to have underpinned his reform agenda. The work fills a significant gap in archaic Greek scholarship, both nationally and in the wider academic world, in terms of historical analysis, political development and the beginnings of philosophy in the Greek archaic period generally, and at Athens in particular. Solon was an historical figure of great significance, quoted by some 115 classical and post-classical authors, yet in terms of recent scholarship no one since Woodhouse (1938) has written exclusively on him and not since Linforth (1919) has there been a commentary on each individual fragment of Solon's poetry. While recent scholarship has emphasised particular aspects of Solon's works, or particular developments at Athens in which Solon is said to have played a part, this book sets out in full his political and social achievements in the context of the philosophical underpinnings that appear to have privileged the socio-political changes initiated by Solon., Solon of Athens was an historical figure of great significance, quoted by some 115 classical and post-classical authors. Yet in terms of recent scholarship, no one since Woodhouse (1938) has written exclusively on Solon, and not since Linforth (1919) has there been a commentary on each individual fragment of Solon's poetry. This book fills a significant gap in Greek scholarship in terms of historical analysis, political development, and the beginnings of philosophy in the Greek archaic period. The book addresses the historical, social, and political contexts within which Solon of Athens instituted wide-ranging reforms to the Athenian constitution (594-93 BCE). It also looks at the impact of those reforms on the growing political self-awareness of the archaic Athenians themselves and the developing ethical and political philosophies that drove reform. The book provides a detailed and comprehensive commentary on each of the 43 extant fragments of Solon's poetry. In the light of modern scholarship, the book sets out the story of Solon's life and examines the nature of the entrenched and threatening political and economic crisis which led to his appointment to high political office. It discusses the manner and consequences of Solon's appointment, identifying both the underlying causes of the crisis and the general outlines of the reform measures adopted by Solon. As well, the book explores both the philosophy and the concept of 'justice' that appears to have underpinned Solon's reform agenda.
LC Classification Number
DF224.S7O94 2010

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