Description
This book explores cases of decapitation found in sources on the reign of Alexander the Great. Despite the enormous literature on the career of Alexander the Great, this is the first study on the characterisation of violent deaths during his hectic reign. This historiographical omission has involved the tacit and blind acceptance of the details found in the ancient sources. Therefore, this book seeks to illustrate how cultural expectations, literary models, and ideological taboos shaped these accounts and argues for a close and critical reading of the sources. Given the different cultural considerations surrounding decapitation in Greek and Roman cultures, this book illustrates how those biases could have differently shaped certain episodes depending on the ultimate writer.
This book, therefore, can be especially interesting for scholars focused on the career of Alexander the Great, but also valuable for other Classicists, philologists, and even for anthropologists because it represents a good case of study of cultural symbolism of violent death, semantics of power, imperial domination and the confrontation between opposite cultural appreciations of a practice.
Author: Marc Mendoza
Publisher: Palgrave MacMillan
Published: 12/17/2022
Pages: 129
Binding Type: Hardcover
Weight: 0.71lbs
Size: 8.27h x 5.83w x 0.38d
ISBN13: 9783031191732
ISBN10: 3031191730
BISAC Categories:
- History | Europe | General
- History | Historiography
- Literary Criticism | Ancient and Classical
About the Author
Marc Mendoza is Associate Lecturer at the University of Lleida, Lleida, Spain.