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From the Beginning to Plato

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40 FROM THE BEGINNING TO PLATO<br />

Politics, Constitutions, Laws and <strong>the</strong> Consequences of Literacy<br />

1.48 Andrewes, A. The Greek Tyrants, London, Hutchinson University Library, 1956.<br />

1.49 Bowie, E. ‘Early Greek elegy, symposium, and public festival’, Journal of Hellenic<br />

Studies 106 (1986): 13–35.<br />

1.50—‘Greek table-talk before Pla<strong>to</strong>’, Rhe<strong>to</strong>rica 11 (1993): 355–71.<br />

1.51 Gagarin, M. Early Greek Law, New Haven, Conn. Yale University Press, 1986.<br />

1.52 Goody, J. The Logic of Writing and <strong>the</strong> Organisation of Society, Cambridge,<br />

Cambridge University Press, 1986.<br />

1.53 Goody, J. and Watt, I. ‘The Consequences of Literacy’, in J.Goody (ed.) Literacy in<br />

Traditional Societies, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1968, pp. 27–68.<br />

1.54 Hölkeskamp, K. ‘Written Law in Archaic Greece’, Proceedings of <strong>the</strong> Cambridge<br />

Philological Society 38 (1992): 87–117.<br />

1.55 Lavelle, B.M. The Sorrow and <strong>the</strong> Pity: A Prolegomenon <strong>to</strong> a His<strong>to</strong>ry of A<strong>the</strong>ns<br />

under <strong>the</strong> Peisistratids, c.560–510 BC, His<strong>to</strong>ria Einzelschriften 80, Stuttgart, Franz<br />

Steiner, 1993.<br />

1.56 Lissarrague, F. The Aes<strong>the</strong>tics of <strong>the</strong> Greek Banquet, Prince<strong>to</strong>n, NJ, Prince<strong>to</strong>n<br />

University Press, 1990.<br />

1.57 Martin, R.P. ‘The Seven Sages as performers of wisdom’, in Dougherty and Kurke<br />

[1.2], pp. 108–28.<br />

1.58 Shapiro, H.A. ‘Hipparchos and <strong>the</strong> rhapsodes’, in Dougherty and Kurke [1.2];<br />

pp. 92–107.<br />

1.59 Thomas, R. Literacy and Orality in Ancient Greece, Cambridge, Cambridge<br />

University Press, 1992.<br />

1.60—‘Written in s<strong>to</strong>ne: Liberty, equality, orality and <strong>the</strong> codification of law’, Bulletin of<br />

<strong>the</strong> Institute of Classical Studies 40(1995): 59–74.<br />

Mythology: Invention, Manipulation<br />

1.61 Davies, J.K. ‘The reliability of <strong>the</strong> oral tradition’, in J.K.Davies and L. Foxhall (eds)<br />

The Trojan War: Its His<strong>to</strong>ricity and Context, Bris<strong>to</strong>l, Bris<strong>to</strong>l Classical Press, 1984,<br />

pp. 87–110.<br />

1.62 Detienne, M. The Creation of Mythology, Chicago, Chicago University Press, 1986.<br />

1.63 Goldhill, S.D. Reading Greek Tragedy, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press,<br />

1986.<br />

1.64 Gould, J. Herodotus, London, Weidenfeld and Nicholson, 1989.<br />

1.65 Hornblower, S. Thucydides, London, Duckworth, 1987.<br />

1.66 Knox, B. Word and Action, Baltimore, Md., Johns Hopkins University Press, 1979.<br />

1.67 Padel, R. In and Out of <strong>the</strong> Mind: Greek Images of <strong>the</strong> Tragic Self, Prince<strong>to</strong>n, NJ,<br />

Prince<strong>to</strong>n University Press, 1992.<br />

1.68 Winkler, J.J. and Zeitlin, F.I. (eds) Nothing <strong>to</strong> Do with Dionysos? A<strong>the</strong>nian Drama in<br />

its Social Context, Prince<strong>to</strong>n, NJ, Prince<strong>to</strong>n University Press, 1990.

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