Evansville Vanderburgh Public Library

Greece and Rome, an integrated history of the Ancient Mediterranean, Robert Garland

Label
Greece and Rome, an integrated history of the Ancient Mediterranean, Robert Garland
Language
eng
resource.accompanyingMatter
technical information on music
Form of composition
not applicable
Format of music
not applicable
Literary text for sound recordings
other
Main title
Greece and Rome
Responsibility statement
Robert Garland
Series statement
Great Courses Audio
Sub title
an integrated history of the Ancient Mediterranean
Summary
Integrated approaches to teaching Greek and Roman history are a rarity in academia. Most scholars are historians of either Greek or Roman history and perform research solely in that specific field, an approach that author and award-winning Professor Robert Garland considers questionable. In these 36 passionate lectures, he provides an impressive and rare opportunity to understand the two dominant cultures of the ancient Mediterranean world in relation to one another - a relationship that has virtually no parallel in world history. He shows you how these two very different cultures intersected, coincided, and at times, collided. You'll discover the extraordinary culture that we call Greco-Roman: a unique fusion of civilizations that encompasses statecraft, mythology, language, philosophy, fine arts, architecture, science, and much else. Who were the Greeks and the Romans? How did they organize their societies? How did they interact? In this unique integrated historical approach, you'll see how Greece and Rome's relationship resembled a marriage: two distinct personalities competing in some areas, sharing in others, and sometimes creating a new synthesis of the two civilizations. And you'll consider their more substantive cultural differences, including religion, their views of foreigners, and their ways of thinking. You'll delight in the variety of sources - literature, archaeology, the visual arts, coinage, inscriptions - that Professor Garland draws upon to assemble a fascinating and complex picture of these two great civilizations. And you'll appreciate how he keeps Greece and Rome focused on how this material affects us today. All Lectures: 1. Who Were the Greeks? Who Were the Romans? 2. Trade and Travel in the Mediterranean 3. Democratic or Republican 4. Law and Order 5. Less than Fully Human 6. Close Encounters, 750 - 272 B.C. 7. The Velvet Glove, 272 - 190 B.C. 8. How the Two Polytheisms (Almost) Merged 9. The Iron Fist, 190 - 146 B.C. 10. The Last Hellenistic Dynasts, 146 - 31 B.C. 11. Why the Greeks Lost, Why the Romans Won 12. Philhellenism and Hellenophobia 13. The Two Languages 14. Leisure and Entertainment 15. Sex and Sexuality 16. Death and the Afterlife 17. From Mystery Religion to Ruler Cult 18. Greek Cities under Roman Rule 19. Greeks in Rome, Romans in Greece 20. The Hellenism of Augustus 21. Art, Looting, and Reproductions 22. Architecture, Sacred and Secular 23. Science and Technology 24. Disease, Medical Care, and Physicians 25. The Greek Epic and Its Roman Echo 26. Tragedy and Comedy 27. Love Poetry, Satire, History, the Novel 28. Greek Influences on Roman Education 29. Greek Philosophy and Its Roman Advocates 30. Hellenomania from Nero to Hadrian 31. Jews, Greeks, and Romans 32. Christianity's Debt to Greece and Rome 33. The Apotheosis of Athens 34. The Decline of the West 35. The Survival of the East 36. The Enduring Duo
Target audience
adult
Transposition and arrangement
not applicable
Classification
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