1st Edition

Truth and History in the Ancient World Pluralising the Past

Edited By Lisa Hau, Ian Ruffell Copyright 2017
    298 Pages
    by Routledge

    298 Pages
    by Routledge

    This collection of essays investigates histories in the ancient world and the extent to which the producers and consumers of those histories believed them to be true. Ancient Greek historiographers repeatedly stressed the importance of truth to history; yet they also purported to believe in myth, distorted facts for nationalistic or moralizing purposes, and omitted events that modern audiences might consider crucial to a truthful account of the past. Truth and History in the Ancient World explores a pluralistic concept of truth – one in which different versions of the same historical event can all be true – or different kinds of truths and modes of belief are contingent on culture.





    Beginning with comparisons between historiography and aspects of belief in Greek tragedy, chapters include discussions of historiography through the works of Herodotus, Xenophon, and Ktesias, as well as Hellenistic and later historiography, material culture in Vitruvius, and Lucian’s satire. Rather than investigate whether historiography incorporates elements of poetic, rhetorical, or narrative techniques to shape historical accounts, or whether cultural memory is flexible or manipulated, this volume examines pluralities of truth and belief within the ancient world – and consequences for our understanding of culture, ancient or otherwise.

    Preface



    Abbreviations



    List of Contributors





    1. Introduction



    Ian Ruffell and Lisa Irene Hau



    2. The Challenging Abundance of the Past: Pluralising and Reducing in Pindar’s Victory Songs



    Jan R. Stenger



    3. Tragedy and Fictionality



    Ian Ruffell



    4. Seventeen Types of Ambiguity in Euripides’ Helen



    Matthew Wright



    5. Multiple Ways to Access the Past: the Myth of Oedipus, Sophocles' Oedipus Rex and Herodotus' Histories



    Catherine Darbo-Peschanski



    6. Fictional Truth and Factual Truth in Herodotus



    Anthony Ellis



    7. Se non è vero: On the Use of Untrue Stories in Herodotus.



    Katharina Wesselmann



    8. Intertextuality and Plural Truths in Xenophon’s Historical Narrative



    Emily Baragwanath



    9. Ctesias of Cnidus: Poet, Novelist or Historian?



    Alexander Meeus



    10. The Aesthetics of Truth: Narrative and Historical Hermeneutics in Polybius' Histories



    Nicolas Wiater



    11. Truth and Moralising: the Twin Aims of the Hellenistic Historiographers



    Lisa Irene Hau



    12. Alexander and the Amazonian Queen: Truth and Fiction



    Joseph Roisman



    13. Lucian on Truth and Lies in Ancient Historiography: the Theory and its Limits



    Melina Tamiolaki





    Index

    Biography

    Lisa Irene Hau is Lecturer in Classics at the University of Glasgow, UK. She has published articles on Greek historiography, moralising and narrative technique, and she is working on a book on moral didacticism in Greek historiography. She is co-editor of Beyond the Battlefields: New Perspectives on Warfare and Society in the Graeco-Roman World (2008).





    Ian Ruffell is Lecturer in Classics at the University of Glasgow, UK. He is author of Politics and Anti-Realism in Athenian Old Comedy: the Art of the Impossible (2011) and Aeschylus: Prometheus Bound (2012).



    "Different stories have always been told about the past, and ancient writers knew it. Could these stories all be true, or true in the same way? Did writers of history see truth in the same way as philosophers or poets or dramatists did, or as we do? Those are the questions that this collection of outstanding essays explores, and fundamental issues of fictionality, of genre, and of truth itself are illuminated along the way."

    - Christopher Pelling, University of Oxford, UK

     

    "The various contributions of this book on the status of reality and truth in history among the ancients demonstrate that there was not one possible approach, and that each literary and methodological genre proposed solutions that still question modern researchers."

    - Antonio Gonzales, ISTA/Université de Franche-Comté (Besançon), France, Bryn Mawr Classical Review 2017