Author(s):
|
Morris, Ian |
URL:
|
http://www.princeton.edu/~pswpc/pdfs/morris/120507.pdf |
Format:
|
Article |
Publisher:
|
Department of Classics, Princeton University |
Publication City:
|
Princeton |
Date:
|
2005 |
Source:
|
Princeton/Stanford Working Papers in Classics |
"Through most of the 20th century classicists saw the 8th century BC as a period of major changes, which they characterized as “revolutionary,” but in the 1990s critics proposed more gradualist interpretations. In this paper I argue that while 30 years of fieldwork and new analyses inevitably require us to modify the framework established by Snodgrass in the 1970s (a profound social and economic depression in the Aegean c. 1100-800 BC; major population growth in the 8th century; social and cultural transformations that established the parameters of classical society), it nevertheless remains the most convincing interpretation of the evidence, and that the idea of an 8th-century revolution remains useful."
Permalink: |
http://etana.org/node/8890 |