Review of Pindar's poetry, patrons, and festivals: from archaic Greece to the Roman Empire, by Hornblower, S. and Morgan, C.(eds.) [Book Review]

Journal of Hellenic Studies 129:140-141 (2009)
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Abstract

:This article uses recent findings about the diversity of political organization in Archaic and Classical Greece beyond Athens, and methodological considerations about the role of civic Hestia in oligarchic communities, to add sharpness to current work on the political contextualization of Classical enkomiastic poetry. The two works considered here remind us of the epichoric political significance of such poetry, because of their attunement to two divergent oligarchic contexts. They thus help to get us back to specific fifth-century political as well as culturalRealien.

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A preliminary view.Catherine Morgan - 1997 - In Lynette G. Mitchell & P. J. Rhodes (eds.), The development of the polis in archaic Greece. New York: Routledge. pp. 168.

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