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DVD video

Title Athens : the truth about democracy
Published 2009

Copies

Location Call no. Vol. Availability
 W'PONDS  320.9385 Hug/Att  2009/10/06  AVAILABLE
 W'PONDS  320.9385 Hug/Att  2009/09/29  AVAILABLE
Description 1 videodisc (DVD) (50 min.) : sd., col. ; 4 3/4 in.
Summary "Historian Bettany Hughes explores the ‘Golden Age’ of ancient Athens at the dawn of democracy. Can Athenian democracy live up to its reputation as the place that we in the West cherish as the birthplace of freedom, equality and free speech? By looking behind the myth Bettany Hughes discovers what was really going on in Golden Age Athens. This series uncovers brand new research about Athens, and the tensions between new ideas and traditional beliefs, and asks how it was that the city that championed democracy could also put to death its most famous thinker, the philosopher Socrates. In the sixth century BC, Athens was run by tyrants, rulers who governed with absolute power, but when one young aristocrat decided to use ‘the power of the people’ on his side to defeat a rival, the genie was out of the bottle. Democracy was born. Voting was restricted to male citizens born in Athens. Slaves and foreigners could not vote, and women not only could not vote, but also had to be veiled outside the home. The most famous of all the generals, Pericles, built the Parthenon to celebrate Athens power, but he also took the city into a disastrous conflict, the Peloponnesian War, which was to be their ultimate undoing." -- ABC1 website
Notes Off-air recording of ABC1 broadcast September 29, October 6, 2009. Copied under Part VA of the Copyright Act
Available for Deakin University staff and students only
No rating given
DVD
Credits Director: Timothy Copestake
Cast Host: Bettany Hughes
Subject Democracy -- Greece -- Athens -- History
Democracy -- Philosophy
SUBJECT Athens (Greece) -- Politics and government
Author Hughes, Bettany
Copestake, Timothy
ABC-TV (Australia)