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The Greek way of death

Front Cover
3 Reviews
Cornell University Press, 2001 - Social Science - 198 pages

Surveying funerary rites and attitudes toward death from the time of Homer to the fourth century B.C., Robert Garland seeks to show what the ordinary Greek felt about death and the dead. The Second Edition features a substantial new prefatory essay in which Garland addresses recent questions and debates about death and the early Greeks. The book also includes an updated Supplementary Bibliography. Praise for the first edition: "This [volume] contains a rich and remarkably complete collection of the abundant but scattered literary, artistic, and archaeological evidence on death in the ancient world as well as an extensive bibliography on the subject. Robert Garland conceives of death as a process, a rite of passage, a mutual but changing relationship between the deceased and [his or her] survivors. . . . A most useful collection of evidence, sensibly organized (no small feat) and lucidly presented. . . . A valuable source on the Greeks and on the always-lively subject of death."—American Historical Review "Much can be learned from this engaging survey of popular attitudes toward death, the dying, and the dead in Greece down to the end of the Classical period. . . . Appealing to scholars and the general audience."—Religious Studies Review

  

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Review: The Greek Way of Death: Jealousy in Literature

User Review  - Fracro - Goodreads

It was so dry I had to read it in the shower. Read full review

Review: The Greek Way of Death: Jealousy in Literature

User Review  - heather - Goodreads

for my death and the afterlife in the ancient world class. this book is readable, which says a lot. academic without being stuffy, it uses greek terms and history but doesn't presuppose a level of ... Read full review

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Contents

The Power and Status of the Dead
1
Dying
13
The Funeral
21
Between Worlds
38
Life in Hades
48
The Special Dead
77
Visiting the Tomb
104

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About the author (2001)

ROBERT GARLAND is Professor of Classics at Colgate University, New York. He is the author of many books, including most recently Celebrity in Antiquity: From Media Tarts to Tabloid Queens (Duckworth 2006), Julius Caesar (Bristol Phoenix Press 2004), Surviving Greek Tragedy (Duckworth 2004), The Daily Life of the Greeks (Greenwood Press, 2nd edn 2008), The Eye of the Beholder: Deformity and Disability in the Graeco-Roman World (Duckworth 1995), and Religion and the Greeks (Bristol Classical Press 1994).

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