Research Catalog

Syrian identity in the Greco-Roman world

Title
Syrian identity in the Greco-Roman world / Nathanael J. Andrade.
Author
Andrade, Nathanael J.
Publication
Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2013.
Supplementary Content
  • Contributor biographical information
  • Publisher description

Available Online

Table of contents

Items in the Library & Off-site

Filter by

1 Item

StatusFormatAccessCall NumberItem Location
TextUse in library JFE 13-7912Schwarzman Building - Main Reading Room 315

Details

Description
xxiii, 412 pages; 24 cm.
Summary
"By engaging with recent developments in the study of empires, this book examines how inhabitants of Roman imperial Syria reinvented expressions and experiences of Greek, Roman and Syrian identification. It demonstrates how the organization of Greek communities and a peer polity network extending citizenship to ethnic Syrians generated new semiotic frameworks for the performance of Greekness and Syrianness. Within these, Syria's inhabitants reoriented and interwove idioms of diverse cultural origins, including those from the Near East, to express Greek, Roman and Syrian identifications in innovative and complex ways. While exploring a vast array of written and material sources, the book thus posits that Greekness and Syrianness were constantly shifting and transforming categories, and it critiques many assumptions that govern how scholars of antiquity often conceive of Roman imperial Greek identity, ethnicity and culture in the Roman Near East, and processes of 'hybridity' or similar concepts"--
Series Statement
Greek culture in the Roman world
Uniform Title
Greek culture in the Roman world.
Subjects
Bibliography (note)
  • Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents
Machine generated contents note: Introduction: signification and cultural performance in Roman imperial Syria; Part I. Greek Poleis and the Syrian Ethnos (2nd century BCE-1st century CE): 1. Antiochus IV and the limits of Greekness under the Seleucids (175-63 BCE); 2. The theater of the frontier: local performance, Roman rulers (63-31 BCE); 3. Converging paths: Syrian Greeks of the Roman Near East (31 BCE-CE 73); Part II. Greek Collectives in Syria (1st-3rd centuries CE): 4. The Syrian Ethnos' Greek cities: dispositions and hegemonies (1st-3rd centuries CE); 5. Cities of imperial frontiers (1st-3rd centuries CE); 6. Hadrian and Palmyra: contrasting visions of Greekness (1st-3rd centuries CE); 7. Dura-Europos: changing paradigms for civic Greekness; Part III. Imitation Greeks: Being Greek and Being Other (2nd and 3rd centuries CE): 8. Greeks write Syria: performance and the signification of Greekness; 9. The theater of empire: Lucian, cultural performance, and Roman rule; 10. Syria writes back: Lucian and On the Syrian Goddess; 11. The ascendency of Syrian Greekness and Romanness; Conclusion.
Call Number
JFE 13-7912
ISBN
  • 9781107012059 (hardback)
  • 1107012058 (hardback)
LCCN
2012040133
OCLC
816317023
Author
Andrade, Nathanael J.
Title
Syrian identity in the Greco-Roman world / Nathanael J. Andrade.
Publisher
Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2013.
Type of Content
text
Type of Medium
unmediated
Type of Carrier
volume
Series
Greek culture in the Roman world
Greek culture in the Roman world.
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Connect to:
Table of contents
Contributor biographical information
Publisher description
Research Call Number
JFE 13-7912
View in Legacy Catalog