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Title South Africa, Greece, Rome : classical confrontations / edited by Grant Parker
Published Cambridge, United Kingdom : Cambridge University Press, 2017

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Description 1 online resource (xxii, 544 pages) : illustrations (some color), maps
Contents Prologue -- The Azanian muse: classicism in unexpected places / Grant Parker -- Conceiving empire -- 'Poetry in pidgin': notes on the persistence of classicism in the architecture of Johannesburg / Federico Freschi -- Cecil John Rhodes, the classics, and imperialism / John Hilton -- The 'Mediterranean' cape: reconstructing an ethos / Peter Merrington -- Conceiving the nation -- 'Copy nothing': classical ideals and Afrikaner ideologies at the Voortrekker monument / Elizabeth Rankin and Rolf Michael Schneider -- Greeks, Romans, and volks-education in the Afrikaner kinderensiklopedie / Philip R. Bosman -- Law, virtue and truth-telling -- A competing discourse on empire / Jonathan Allen -- After Cicero: legal thought from antiquity to the new constitution / Deon H. van Zyl -- Cultures of collecting -- Museum space and displacement: collecting classical antiquities in South Africa / Samantha Masters -- Antique casts for a colonial gallery: the Beit bequest of classical statuary to Cape Town / Anna Tietze -- Cecil Rhodes as a reader of the classics: the Groote Schuur Collection / David Wardle -- Boundary crossers -- 'You are people like these Romans were!': D.D.T. Jabavu of Fort Hare / Jo-Marie Claassen -- Benjamin Farrington and the science of the swerve / John Atkinson -- Athens and apartheid: Mary Renault and classics in South Africa / Nikolai Endres -- Antiquity's undertone: classical resonances in the poetry of Douglas Livingstone / Kathleen M. Coleman -- After apartheid -- Bacchus at Kirstenbosch: reflections of a play director / Roy Sargeant -- The reception of the Electra myth in Yael Farber's Molora / Elke Steinmeyer -- Classical heritage? : by way of an afterword / Grant Parker
Summary How have ancient Greece and Rome intersected with South African histories? This book canvasses architecture, literature, visual arts and historical memory. Some of the most telling manifestations of classical reception in South Africa have been indirect, for example neo-classical architecture or retellings of mythical stories. Far from being the mere handmaiden of colonialism (and later apartheid), classical antiquity has enabled challenges to the South African establishment, and provided a template for making sense of cross-cultural encounters. Though access to classical education has been limited, many South Africans, black and white, have used classical frames of reference and drawn inspiration from the ancient Greeks and Romans. While classical antiquity may seem antithetical to post-apartheid notions of heritage, it deserves to be seen in this light. Museums, historical sites and artworks, up to the present day, reveal juxtapositions in which classical themes are integrated into South African pasts
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Online resource; title from electronic title page (CambrigeCore, viewed May 17, 2018)
Subject Civilization -- Classical
ART -- Performance.
ART -- Reference.
Civilization, Classical
Civilization -- Classical influences
SUBJECT South Africa -- Civilization -- Classical influences
Subject South Africa
Form Electronic book
Author Parker, Grant Richard, 1967- editor.
ISBN 9781316181416
1316181413
9781108223980
1108223982
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1108222633
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110821858X