Cosmopolis : imagining community in late classical Athens and the early Roman Empire / Daniel S. Richter.

This is a book about the ways in which various intellectuals in the post-classical Mediterranean imagined the human community as a unified, homogenous whole composed of a diversity of parts. More specifically, this study explores the ways in which authors of the second century ce adopted and adapted...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Richter, Daniel S.
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Oxford ; New York : Oxford University Press, ©2011.
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Online Access:Click for online access
Description
Summary:This is a book about the ways in which various intellectuals in the post-classical Mediterranean imagined the human community as a unified, homogenous whole composed of a diversity of parts. More specifically, this study explores the ways in which authors of the second century ce adopted and adapted a particular ethnic and cultural discourse that had been elaborated by late fifth- and fourth-century bce Athenian intellectuals. At the center of this book is a series of contests over the meaning of lineage and descent and the extent to which the political community is or ought to be coterminous with what we might call a biologically homogenous collectivity. Beginning in the early fourth century and gaining great momentum in the wake of Alexander's conquest of the East, traditional dichotomies such as Greek and barbarian lost much of their explanatory power. In the second-century ce, by contrast, the empire of the Romans imposed a political space that was imagined by many to be coterminous with the oikoumenê itself. One of the central claims of this study is that the forms of cosmopolitan and ecumenical thought that emerged in both moments did so as responses to the idea that the natio-the kin group-is (or ought to be) the basis for any human collectivity.
Physical Description:1 online resource (ix, 278 pages)
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical (pages 247-269) references.
ISBN:9780199773206
0199773203
9780199895083
0199895082
Source of Description, Etc. Note:Print version record.