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Contested Pasts A Determinist History Of Alexander The Great In The Roman Empire Jennifer Finn

  • SKU: BELL-53989312
Contested Pasts A Determinist History Of Alexander The Great In The Roman Empire Jennifer Finn
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Contested Pasts A Determinist History Of Alexander The Great In The Roman Empire Jennifer Finn instant download after payment.

Publisher: University of Michigan Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 2.42 MB
Pages: 245
Author: Jennifer Finn
ISBN: 9780472133031, 0472133039
Language: English
Year: 2022

Product desciption

Contested Pasts A Determinist History Of Alexander The Great In The Roman Empire Jennifer Finn by Jennifer Finn 9780472133031, 0472133039 instant download after payment.

Taking as a key turning point the self-fashioning of the first Roman emperor Augustus, author Jennifer Finn revisits the idea of "universal history" in Polybius, Justin, and Diodorus, combined with the Stoic philosophy of determinism present in authors like Plutarch and Arrian. Finn endeavors to determine the ways in which Roman authors manipulated narratives about Alexander's campaigns—and even other significant events in Mediterranean history—to artificially construct a past to which the Romans could attach themselves as a natural teleological culmination.

In doing so, Contested Pasts uses five case studies to reexamine aspects of Alexander's campaigns that have received much attention in modern scholarship, providing new interpretations of issues such as: his connections to the Trojan and Persian wars; the Great Weddings at Susa; the battle(s) of Thermopylae in 480 BCE and 191 BCE and Alexander's conflict at the Persian Gates; the context of his "Last Plans";" the role of his memory in imagining the Roman Civil Wars; and his fictitious visit to the city of Jerusalem.

While Finn demonstrates throughout the book that the influence for many of these narratives likely originated in the reign of Alexander or his Successors, nevertheless these retroactive authorial manipulations force us to confront the fact that we may have an even more opaque understanding of Alexander than has previously been acknowledged. Through the application of a mnemohistorical approach, the book seeks to provide a new understanding of the ways in which the Romans—and people in the purview of the Romans—conceptualized their own world with reference to Alexander the Great.

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