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- 09 April 2025, Greta Hawes
- Last year, the editors of Classical Review announced that we would begin reviewing digital projects. This move recognises both the importance of digital resources...
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- 21 March 2025, Thomas Clements
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- 23 April 2025, Maddalena Alvi
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The post A book about the European Art Market and the First World War first appeared on Fifteen Eighty Four | Cambridge University Press....
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- 11 April 2025, Thomas Gidney
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The post An ‘anomaly among anomalies’ or an international norm? How Britain inserted its colonies into the League of Nations. first appeared on Fifteen Eighty Four | Cambridge University Press....
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- 14 March 2025, Adolfo Polo y La Borda
- We live now in a time in which more and more people vouch for building up walls and barriers to deter the movement of people as it is seen with suspicion; as
The post Moving along the First Global Empire first appeared on Fifteen Eighty Four | Cambridge University Press....
Color Us Greek
While it’s too much to imagine that those endlessly fascinating Greek ancestors of ours were color-blind, they most certainly were keen on marking difference, linguistically and geographically. But what about “racially?” What was “blackness” to a citizen of Ancient Greece, and what did the blackness of Sub-Saharan Africans, in fact, signify? And what in the world did an “Ethiopian” such as Memnon, whose people were favored by the gods, appear to be physically in the Greek imagination? Speculation about such complex matters has never elicited more energetic speculation and wishful thinking from scholars, journalists, and filmmakers than today, who inevitably read Greek attitudes toward physical differences through the lens of black-white race relations in the West today. Which is why Sarah Derbew’s Untangling Blackness in Greek Antiquity is a most welcome corrective to the school of Afrocentricity that would paint even Greek-descended Cleopatra black. Bringing deep learning and calm, convincing reasoning to a politically-loaded subject is always difficult. But Professor Derbew accomplishes this task with eloquence, grace, and hard-hitting analytical skills that make this book must reading for all of us who long to know how racial differences manifested themselves in the sublime culture from which we all descend.
Henry Louis Gates, Jr.
Harvard University
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