Archives: Chapters

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Acknowledgments

Acknowledgments It is a pleasure to acknowledge the many people who have contributed in large and small ways to the development of this book. They are: Susanna Braund, Don Cameron, Jenny Strauss Clay, Erwin Cook, John Miles Foley, Andrew Ford, Michael Gagarin, Traianos Gagos, John Garcia, Simon Goldhill, Richard Janko, Ludwig Koenen, Andre Lardinois, […]

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Bibliography

Bibliography Alty, J. 1982. “Dorians and Ionians.” JHS 102:1–14. Armayor, O. K. 1987. “Hecataeus’ Humor and Irony in Herodotus’ Narrative of Egypt.” AW 16:11–18. ———. 1978. “Herodotus’ Persian Vocabulary.” AW 1:4. Asad, T. 1986. “The Concept of Cultural Translation in British Social […]

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4. The Meaning of Language Difference

4. The Meaning of Language Difference On misunderstanding language difference In relation to the standards against which he measures himself, the histōr of the Histories possesses a multi-lingual competence that contrasts with the sense of strangeness most Greek-speakers experience when confronted with any barbarian speech. In his narrative of the common […]

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3. Herodotos hermēneus

3. Herodotos hermēneus Metalinguistic glosses Herodotus himself assumes the role of interpreter when he translates a foreign word into Greek or provides a native term. Aside from Psammetichus’ discovery that bekós is Phrygian for bread (2.2), all switches of the linguistic code in the Histories occur in metanarrative. [1] In about twenty […]

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2. The Ethnographer and Foreign Languages

2. The Ethnographer and Foreign Languages Another histōr: Psammetichus and the origin of language One passage in the Histories appears to raise the anthropological problem of the beginning of human speech and therefore, potentially, of the origin of language differentiation. But it does so in an indirect way, through the eyes […]

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1. Greek Speakers

1. Greek Speakers Greeks and Pelasgians In his narrative of Miltiades’ conquest of Lemnos (6.137–140), Herodotus begins by reporting how at that time Pelasgians were occupying the island. In the heroic age these Pelasgians used to live in Attica but the Athenians expelled them, “either justly or unjustly,” depending on the […]

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Introduction

Introduction As Herodotus explores how much and in which ways human societies are mutually different, he takes for granted the generally recognized subdivision of the world into Greeks and barbarians. [1] But this common-view discourse provides only a partial framework of explanation for the text of the Histories. [2] The language of […]