The Black Hunter: Forms of Thought and Forms of Society in the Greek World

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JHU Press, 1986 - History - 367 pages

"No one can fail to admire the brilliance of the connections Vidal-Naquet suggests . . . Audacity has been characteristic of Vidal-Naquet's career from the start; it marked his activities as a historian engagé in the political struggle; it is visible at work in every page of this book."—Bernard Knox, from the Foreword

The black hunter travels through the mountains and forests of Greek mythology, living on the frontier of the city-state, of adulthood, of class, of ethics, of sexuality. Taking its title from this figure, The Black Hunter approaches the Greek world from its margins and charts the elaborate system of oppositions that pervaded Greek culture and society: cultivated and wild, citizen and foreigner, real and imaginary, god and man. Organizing his discussions around four principle themes—space and time; youth and warriors; women, slaves, and artisans; and the city of vision and of reality—Pierre Vidal-Naquet focuses on the congruence of the textual and the actual, on the patterns that link literary, philosophical, and historical works with such social activities as war, slavery, education, and commemoration. The Black Hunter probes the interplay of world view, language, and social practice "to bring into dialogue that which does not naturally communicate according to the usual criteria of historical judgement."

 

Contents

Epaminondas the Pythagorean or the Tactical Problem
15
Contents
129
Platos Myth of the Statesman the Ambiguities of the Golden
263
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About the author (1986)

Pierre Vidal-Naquet is director of the Centre de Recherches comparées sur les Sociétés Anciennes at the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales in Paris. Among his many publications are Clisthène l' Athénien, with Pierre Lévêque, and Mythe et Tragédie, with Jean-Pierre Vernant. Andrew Szegedy-Maszak is professor of classics at Wesleyan University and the author of The "Nomoi" of Theophrastus.

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