Reclaiming the Past: Argos and Its Archaeological Heritage in the Modern Era
Reclaiming the Past examines the post-antique history of Argos and how the city's archaeological remains have been perceived and experienced since the late eighteenth century by both local residents and foreign visitors to the Greek Peloponnese. The first western visitors to Argos—a city continuously inhabited for six millennia—invariably expected to encounter landscapes described in classical texts—yet what they found fell far short of those expectations. At the same time, local meanings attributed to ancient sites reflected an understanding of the past at odds with the supposed expertise of classically educated outsiders.

Jonathan M. Hall details how new views of Argos emerged after the Greek War of Independence (1821–1830) with the adoption of national narratives connecting the newly independent kingdom to its ancient Hellenic past. With rising local antiquarianism at the end of the nineteenth century, new tensions surfaced between conserving the city's archaeological heritage and promoting urban development. By carefully assessing the competing knowledge claims between insiders and outsiders over Argos's rich history, Reclaiming the Past addresses pressing questions about who owns the past.

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Reclaiming the Past: Argos and Its Archaeological Heritage in the Modern Era
Reclaiming the Past examines the post-antique history of Argos and how the city's archaeological remains have been perceived and experienced since the late eighteenth century by both local residents and foreign visitors to the Greek Peloponnese. The first western visitors to Argos—a city continuously inhabited for six millennia—invariably expected to encounter landscapes described in classical texts—yet what they found fell far short of those expectations. At the same time, local meanings attributed to ancient sites reflected an understanding of the past at odds with the supposed expertise of classically educated outsiders.

Jonathan M. Hall details how new views of Argos emerged after the Greek War of Independence (1821–1830) with the adoption of national narratives connecting the newly independent kingdom to its ancient Hellenic past. With rising local antiquarianism at the end of the nineteenth century, new tensions surfaced between conserving the city's archaeological heritage and promoting urban development. By carefully assessing the competing knowledge claims between insiders and outsiders over Argos's rich history, Reclaiming the Past addresses pressing questions about who owns the past.

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Reclaiming the Past: Argos and Its Archaeological Heritage in the Modern Era

Reclaiming the Past: Argos and Its Archaeological Heritage in the Modern Era

by Jonathan M. Hall
Reclaiming the Past: Argos and Its Archaeological Heritage in the Modern Era

Reclaiming the Past: Argos and Its Archaeological Heritage in the Modern Era

by Jonathan M. Hall

Hardcover

$52.95 
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Overview

Reclaiming the Past examines the post-antique history of Argos and how the city's archaeological remains have been perceived and experienced since the late eighteenth century by both local residents and foreign visitors to the Greek Peloponnese. The first western visitors to Argos—a city continuously inhabited for six millennia—invariably expected to encounter landscapes described in classical texts—yet what they found fell far short of those expectations. At the same time, local meanings attributed to ancient sites reflected an understanding of the past at odds with the supposed expertise of classically educated outsiders.

Jonathan M. Hall details how new views of Argos emerged after the Greek War of Independence (1821–1830) with the adoption of national narratives connecting the newly independent kingdom to its ancient Hellenic past. With rising local antiquarianism at the end of the nineteenth century, new tensions surfaced between conserving the city's archaeological heritage and promoting urban development. By carefully assessing the competing knowledge claims between insiders and outsiders over Argos's rich history, Reclaiming the Past addresses pressing questions about who owns the past.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781501760532
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Publication date: 12/15/2021
Pages: 264
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 1.00(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Jonathan M. Hall is the Phyllis Fay Horton Distinguished Service Professor in the Humanities at the University of Chicago. His recent books include A History of the Archaic Greek World, ca. 1200–479 BCE and Artifact and Artifice.

Table of Contents

Introduction: Who Owns the Past?
Part One: From Ancient History to the Modern Era
1. A Greek Town for 6,000 Years
2. The Rediscovery of Argos
3. Devastation and Reconstruction
Part Two: Reclaiming the Past
4. Safeguarding Heritage
5. A New Age of Archaeological Heritage
Conclusion: Preservation or Progress?

What People are Saying About This

Gregory Jusdanis

Reclaiming the Past is a fascinating and bold study of the history of Argos through the centuries. Jonathan M. Hall's diachronic approach enables him to chronicle this important and contested place with encyclopedic knowledge about the various phases of continuity and discontinuity this town has experienced from antiquity to the present.

Dimitri Nakassis

Jonathan M. Hall presents an empirically rich analysis of the complex historical relationships between the community of Argos and its archaeological heritage. Reclaiming the Past effectively bridges the conceptual divide between archaeological work, urban development, heritage, and community formation at the local level, and thus makes an important—indeed critical—contribution to archaeology in Greece.

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