Frontmatter
List of Figures
List of Contributors
0: Greta Hawes: Of Myths and Maps
1: Katherine Clarke: Walking through History: Unlocking the
Mythical Past
2: Daniel W. Berman: Cities-Before-Cities: 'Prefoundational' Myth
and the Construction of Greek Civic Space
3: Richard Buxton: Landscapes of the Cyclopes
4: Elizabeth Minchin: Mapping the Hellespont with Leander and Hero:
'The Swimming Lover and the Nightly Bride'
5: Emma Aston: Centaurs and Lapiths in the Landscape of
Thessaly
6: Stephanie Larson: Meddling with Myth in Thebes: A New Vase from
the Ismenion Hill (Thebes Museum 49276)
7: Jeremy McInerney: Callimachus and the Poetics of the
Diaspora
8: Julie Baleriaux: Pausanias' Arcadia, Between Conservatism and
Innovation
9: Christina A. Salowey: Rivers Run Through It: Environmental
History in Two Heroic Riverine Battles
10: Betsey A. Robinson: Fountains as Reservoirs of Myth and
Memory
11: Aara Suksi: Scandalous Maps in Aeschylean Tragedy
12: Iris Sulimani: Imaginary Islands in the Hellenistic Era: Utopia
on the Geographical Map
13: Robert L. Fowler: Imaginary Itineraries in the Beyond
14: Charles Delattre: Islands of Knowledge: Space and Names in
Imperial Mythography
15: Richard Hunter: Serpents in the Soul: The 'Libyan Myth' of Dio
Chrysostom
Endmatter
Bibliography
Index locorum
General index
Greta Hawes is a lecturer in Classics and Ancient History at the
Australian National University. She specializes in the study of
Greek myth, particularly the examination of ancient contexts for
storytelling, the Greeks' assessment of mythic phenomena in their
own culture, and the modes of interpretation to which these gave
rise. Her first book, Rationalizing Myth in Antiquity (OUP, 2014),
charts ancient dissatisfaction with the excesses of myth and
various
attempts to cut them down to size; it argues that this
rationalizing tradition offers important insights into the
practical difficulties inherent in distinguishing myth from history
in antiquity and into the
fragmented nature of myth itself as an emic concept. Her current
research explores the spatial dynamics of ancient storytelling and
the various intricate relationships between myths and land. She is
currently working on a project exploring the place of myth in an
ancient travel guide, the Periegesis of Pausanias (2nd century AD).
Overall, the 15 contributions in Myths on the Map add up to
something more tan a collection of useful papers... The melding
together of archaeology, history, literary analysis, and
myth--often in the same paper--is especially rewarding.
*Bob Trubshaw, Time and Mind*
Myths on the Map offers much food for thought and the varied scope
and interdisciplinary contributions from archaeological, literary,
and philosophical perspectives are refreshing ... it will
undoubtedly stimulate fresh debate and there will be few readers
who will not find something of interest in this work.
*Olaf Almqvist, Hermathena*
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