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Record ID harvard_bibliographic_metadata/ab.bib.13.20150123.full.mrc:420594778:3499
Source harvard_bibliographic_metadata
Download Link /show-records/harvard_bibliographic_metadata/ab.bib.13.20150123.full.mrc:420594778:3499?format=raw

LEADER: 03499cam a2200409 a 4500
001 013368147-5
005 20121113114725.0
008 110509s2012 enkab b 001 0 eng
010 $a 2011017482
020 $a9780199793600
020 $a0199793603
035 0 $aocn722450912
035 $a(PromptCat)40021354253
040 $aDLC$beng$cDLC$dYDX$dYDXCP$dBTCTA$dOCLCO$dERASA$dCDX$dOCLCO$dBWX
042 $apcc
043 $ae-gr---
050 00 $aDF135$b.S55 2012
082 00 $a305.800938$223
100 1 $aSkinner, Joseph$q(Joseph Edward)
245 14 $aThe invention of Greek ethnography :$bfrom Homer to Herodotus /$cJoseph E. Skinner.
260 $aOxford ;$aNew York :$bOxford University Press,$cc2012.
300 $axi, 343 p. :$bill., maps ;$c24 cm.
490 1 $aGreeks overseas
504 $aIncludes bibliography and index.
505 0 $aMachine generated contents note: ch. 1 Ethnography before Ethnography -- 1.1.Framing the Problem: Defining Ethnography -- 1.2."Other" Ethnographies -- 1.3.Ethnography (re) Defined -- 1.4.Approaches to (Greek) Identity -- 1.5.Structuring Discourse, Inventing Genre: Felix Jacoby and Greek Ethnography -- 1.6.Ethnography and Identity -- 1.7.Polarities Deconstructed -- 1.8.Setting Sail: Homeric Paradigms and the Economies of Knowledge -- ch. 2 Populating the Imaginaire -- 2.1.Phaeacians and Cyclopes -- 2.2.Hyperboreans -- 2.3.Arimaspians -- 2.4.Scythians -- 2.5.Amazons -- 2.6.Thracians -- 2.7.Phoenicians -- 2.8.Lydians -- 2.9.Ethiopians -- 2.10.Egyptians -- 2.11.Pelasgians -- 2.12.Arcadia -- ch. 3 Mapping Ethnography -- 3.1.Naming and Describing -- 3.1.1.Epithets -- 3.1.2.Stereotyping -- 3.2.listing and Imagining -- 3.3.Enquiring -- 3.4.Celebrating Place and People -- 3.4.1.Epinicia -- 3.4.2.Greek Coinage and its Reception -- 3.5.Visualizing -- 3.6.Consuming --
505 0 $ach. 4 Mapping Identities -- 4.1.Between Boundless Steppe and a Welcoming Sea: Olbia and its Environs -- 4.1.1.Negotiated Heterogeneity: From Earliest Contacts to the Fifth Century B.C. -- 4.1.2.Points of Contact and Receptions of Difference -- 4.2.Reconstructing Identities in Southern Calabria: An Archaeology of discourse -- 4.2.1.Framing the Argument: Contact, Interaction, and Systems of Exchange -- 4.2.2.Landscape and Identity in Southern Calabria -- 4.2.3.Materials in Circulation, Ideas in Play -- 4.2.4.The Play of Identities, Knowledge, and Difference -- 4.2.5.Notions of Place -- 4.2.6.The Case for Difference: The Western Locrians -- 4.2.7.Conflict, Connectivity, and Exchange: The View from the Margins -- 4.3.The Imagined Centre: Identity and Difference at Delphi and Olympia -- 4.3.1.(Re)constructing Difference at Delphi and Olympia -- 4.3.2."Reading" Objects, Viewing People: Everyday Activities at the Center of all things "Greek" -- 4.3.3.Delphi and Colonization --
505 0 $a4.3.4.Eclectic Spaces? Material Identities, Intercultural Contact, and Receptions of "Difference" -- ch. 5 The Invention of Greek Ethnography -- 5.1.Ethnography and Identity, from Homer to Herodotus -- 5.2.Inventing the Greek -- 5.3.Ancient Ethnography: Future Directions, New Approaches.
650 0 $aEthnology$zGreece$xHistory.
650 0 $aHistoriography$zGreece$xHistory.
650 0 $aHistory, Ancient$xHistoriography.
650 0 $aNational characteristics, Greek.
651 0 $aGreece$xCivilization$yTo 146 B.C.
655 7 $aHistory.$2fast
830 0 $aGreeks overseas.
899 $a415_565478
988 $a20121003
906 $0DLC