Image for Modern Greek Lessons

Modern Greek Lessons : A Primer in Historical Constructivism

Part of the Princeton studies in culture/power/history series
See all formats and editions

This is a study of the cosmopolitan intellectual life of Athens, a city on the margins of Europe, recovering from the repressive rule of a military junta.

Drawing inspiration from Athens and its cultural elite, the author explores the meaning of modernity.

He finds it not in the singular character of "Western civilization", but instead in an increasingly diverse family of practices of reform.

He analyzes an especially instructive example. A circle of Athenian reformers, reclaiming the continuity of an ostensibly discontinuous heritage while charting a course for change, realize their modernity in the practice of what Faubion terms "historical constructivism" - the synthesizing of history, or the absorption of the past into the present.

Read More
Title Unavailable: Out of Print
Product Details
Princeton University Press
069109473X / 9780691094731
Hardback
05/12/1993
United States
340 pages, 28 halftones
197 x 254 mm, 680 grams
Professional & Vocational/Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly/Undergraduate Learn More