توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Citizenship in Antiquity: Civic Communities in the Ancient Mediterranean (Rewriting Antiquity)
نام کتاب : Citizenship in Antiquity: Civic Communities in the Ancient Mediterranean (Rewriting Antiquity)
ویرایش : 1
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : شهروندی در دوران باستان: جوامع مدنی در مدیترانه باستان (بازنویسی دوران باستان)
سری :
نویسندگان : Jakub Filonik (editor), Christine Plastow (editor), Rachel Zelnick-Abramovitz (editor)
ناشر : Routledge
سال نشر : 2023
تعداد صفحات : 751
ISBN (شابک) : 9780367687113 , 0367687119
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 15 مگابایت
بعد از تکمیل فرایند پرداخت لینک دانلود کتاب ارائه خواهد شد. درصورت ثبت نام و ورود به حساب کاربری خود قادر خواهید بود لیست کتاب های خریداری شده را مشاهده فرمایید.
فهرست مطالب :
Cover\nHalf Title\nSeries Page\nTitle Page\nCopyright Page\nTable of Contents\nList of Figures\nList of Tables\nList of Abbreviations\nNotes on Contributors\n1 Citizenship in Antiquity: Current Perspectives and Challenges\nPart I: Theory of Citizenship\n 2 Exploring Citizenship(s) in Context(s): Anthropological Perspectives\n 3 Greek Citizenship\n 4 Lifestyle and Behaviour in Archaic and Classical Greece: The other Language of Citizenship\n 5 Models of Roman Citizenship from Augustus to Boris Johnson\nPart II: The Ancient Near East\n 6 Citizens and Non-Citizens in the Age of Hammurabi\n 7 Citizenship in Hittite Anatolia\n 8 The Evolution of Citizen Councils and Assemblies in Ancient Phoenicia\n 9 Neo-Babylonian Citizenship Practices in a Comparative Mediterranean Context\nPart III: The Greek World\n Section I: Archaic and Classical Greece\n 10 The Supreme Arbitrator and the dēmos: City Founders and Reformers\n 11 ‘Citizens’ and ‘Others’ in Archaic and Early Classical Crete\n 12 Spartan oliganthrōpia and Homoioi\n 13 Exile and Conflicting Identities in Archaic and Early classical Greece\n 14 Granting Citizenship to Women in Ancient Epirus\n 15 Citizenship and the Spartan Kosmos\n 16 Civic Subdivisions and the Citizen Community\n 17 The Language of Citizenship in Herodotus and Thucydides\n 18 Performing the City: Religious Aspects of Greek Citizenship\n 19 Sharing in the Polis: Conceptualizing Classical Greek Citizenship\n Section II: Classical Athens\n 20 The Citizen Body\n 21 Smuggling Infants: Citizenship Fraud in Classical Athens\n 22 Polis and Oikos: Citizenship and Family Membership in Classical Athens\n 23 Identity, Status, and ‘Dishonour’: Was Atimia Relevant only to Citizens?\n 24 Could Athenian Women be Counted as Citizens in Democratic Athens?\n 25 Places of Citizenship in Athenian Forensic Oratory\n 26 Citizenship Anxieties: The Athenian diapsēphisis of 346/345 BCE\n 27 Appeals to Associations and Claims to Citizenship in Athenian Oratory\n 28 ‘He’s a Scythian!’: The ‘Birther’ Attack in Classical Athens\n 29 Darkest Hour: Hyperides and the Emergency Measures after Chaeronea\nPart IV: The Hellenistic World\n 30 Citizenship in the Hellenistic Period\n 31 Citizenship in the Classical and Hellenistic Western Mediterranean\n 32 Citizenship, Identification, and the Metic Experience in Classical and Early Hellenistic Greece\n 33 Hellenistic Egypt and the Hybridization of ‘Citizenship’\n 34 The Making of the Citizen in Hellenistic Poleis\nPart V: Between and Beyond Greece and Rome\n 35 Citizens and Citizenship in pre-Roman Carthage\n 36 Manumission and Citizenship in Ancient Greece and Rome\n 37 Jewishness as ‘Citizenship’ in Jewish writings from the Hellenistic and Roman Periods\n 38 Multiple Citizenship in Roman Asia Minor\n 39 The Greeks and the Right of Roman Citizenship in the Late Republic\nPart VI: Rome and the Roman World\n 40 Politics and Citizenship in Etruscan and Italic Societies\n 41 Rome’s Italian Expansion and the Transformation of Roman Citizenship (387–91 BCE)\n 42 Religion and Citizenship in Republican Rome\n 43 Census, Censor, Citizenship: Republican Subjectivity in Advance of Monarchy\n 44 Citizenship in the Roman Provinces: The Example of Africa\n 45 Citizenship in Roman Egypt Before 212 CE\n 46 Towards Universal Citizenship: The Roman Empire in 212 CE\nPart VII: Late Antiquity and the Middle Ages\n 47 The Uses of Citizenship in the Post-Roman West\n 48 Christian Reconceptualizations of Citizenship and Freedom in the Latin West\n 49 Citizenship and Belonging: A View from Byzantium\nIndex