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Intro to Ancient History Week 9: narratives, periods and comparisons.

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Presentation on theme: "Intro to Ancient History Week 9: narratives, periods and comparisons."— Presentation transcript:

1 Intro to Ancient History Week 9: narratives, periods and comparisons

2 Narrative and analysis Why is narrative discouraged? Too easy; not proper history. Elitist: focus on upper classes, politics. Misleading: focused on short-term events. Too literary; dangerously close to fiction. Too difficult to do well; likely to be derivative.

3 Analysis and Narrative But of course analysis is always dependent on pre-existing narrative structures; generally very conventional ones, taken for granted. Why study slavery under the Republic and slavery under the Principate ? What difference does this make to understanding the development of Roman slavery? Periodisation: assumption that political structures determine everything else?

4 Telling Stories about the Past Story is not intrinsic to facts: narratives are invented, not found, historian selects certain events ( story elements ) and makes certain connections between them. Events acquire significance from incorporation into story. Archetypal plots: historian approaches past with an idea of the sort of stories that might be told about it (Hayden White). Tragedy, romance, comedy, satire.

5 Grand Narratives Conceptions of overall shape of history, and underlying laws of motion : key terms like evolution, progress, development. Key issues: determinism, teleology. Shapes conception of antiquity in relation to other periods: modern and pre-modern? Can we use evidence from slavery in the US in the nineteenth century to study Rome?


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