John Dillon describes intriguing aspects of everyday life in Athenian society and considers the moral and ethical questions the Greeks associated with them. Chapters are devoted to the family (including relations between husband and wife and parents and children); the position of non-citizen women (the problems and limited rights of courtesans, for example); inheritance (securing the male heir, the rights of widows, daughters); behaviour towards friends and enemies; friendship and love; homosexuality and pseudo-homosexuality; slavery (what it was like to be a slave, the various conditions of slaves, etc); and piety and impiety. Each chapter draws on historical sources to tell two or more contrasting stories chosen to give students a handle on attitudes and beliefs as well as on texts from contemporary literature, history, or philosophy that bear on the issues of the chapter. The book is as much an introduction to ancient Greek thought and literature as to its moral codes and behaviour. It is based on a course given at Trinity College Dublin over several years.
- ISBN10 0748616195
- ISBN13 9780748616190
- Publish Date 1 July 2004
- Publish Status Cancelled
- Out of Print 19 October 2003
- Publish Country GB
- Imprint Edinburgh University Press
- Format Paperback
- Language English