ABSTRACT

Herodotus is the epochal authority who inaugurated the European and Western consciousness of collective identity, whether in an awareness of other societies and of the nature of cultural variation itself or in the fashioning of Greek self-awareness – and necessarily that of later civilizations influenced by the ancient Greeks – which was perpetually in dialogue and tension with other ways of living in groups.

In this book, 14 contributors explore ethnicity – the very self-understanding of belonging to a separate body of human beings – and how it evolves and consolidates (or ethnogenesis). This inquiry is focussed through the lens of Herodotus as our earliest master of ethnography, in this instance not only as the stylized portrayal of other societies, but also as an exegesis on how ethnocultural differentiation may affect the lives, and even the very existence, of one’s own people.

Ethnicity and Identity in Herodotus is one facet of a project that intends to bring Portuguese and English-speaking scholars of antiquity into closer cooperation. It has united a cross-section of North American classicists with a distinguished cohort of Portuguese and Brazilian experts on Greek literature and history writing in English.

Chapters 8 and 9 of this book is freely available as a downloadable Open Access PDF at https://www.taylorfrancis.com under a Creative Commons (CC-BY) 4.0 license.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

part I|93 pages

The methodology of ethnic identification in Herodotus

part II|91 pages

Ethnicity among the Greeks

chapter 5|34 pages

Mages and Ionians revisited

chapter 7|19 pages

Cosmopolitanism and contingency in Herodotus

Myth and tragedy in the Book IV of the Histories

chapter 8|20 pages

A goddess for the Greeks

Demeter as identity factor in Herodotus

part III|70 pages

Ethnic identity among the Barbaroi

chapter 9|19 pages

Herodotus' Memphite sources

chapter 10|17 pages

The Greeks as seen from the east

Xerxes' European enemy

chapter 11|21 pages

Mirages of ethnicity and the distant north in Book IV of the Histories

Hyperboreans, Arimaspians, and Issedones

chapter 12|11 pages

Ethnicity in Herodotus

The story of Helen through the Egyptians' eyes

part IV|57 pages

Reflections of Herodotean ethnic historiography

chapter 13|25 pages

Barbarians, Greekness, and wisdom

The afterlife of Croesus' debate with Solon