Description



Trade Review
A conscientious and important history of the study of classicism in America during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries... Ms. Winterer sheds light on the virtual disappearance of the ancients from the modern imagination. -- Rochelle Gurstein Wall Street Journal This book makes, in particular, two significant contributions to the field: it expands the scope of inquiry beyond the opening decades of the nation's history, where scholarly interest has tended to concentrate; and it shifts the focus from what has become familiar (the classicism of the founding fathers and the influence of nineteenth-century German scholarship) to what is less well-known... Winterer's prose moves swiftly and with punch, and she displays an easy familiarity with her subject matter. -- Matthew M. McGowan Bryn Mawr Classical Review Richly informative yet concise and lucid, this book is filled with interesting insight... It is, without question, one of the greatest contributions to [the field of classics in nineteenth-century America] yet published. -- Carl J. Richard American Historical Review The first full and sympathetic account of the changing role of classical education in pre-World War I America... The story told is, on the whole, one of gradual if heroically resisted extinction. -- Thomas L. Pangle Journal of American History 2003 Worthwhile reading not only for those interested in the history of the classics in American education, but also for anyone interested in the changes wrought in American education between the American Revolution and the twentieth century. -- Joseph Casazza New England Classical Journal This clearly-written and perceptive book provides the first general survey of the role of classics in the USA in the nineteenth century. -- Christopher Stray Mouseion: Journal of Classical Association of Canada An intelligent book about an important period. -- Karl Galinsky Libraries & the Cultural Record 2006

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter 1. Antiquity in the New Nation
Chapter 2. The Rise of Greece
Chapter 3. From Words to Worlds, 1820–1870
Chapter 4. Classical Civilization Consecrated, 1870–1910
Chapter 5. Scholarship Versus Culture, 1870–1910
Epilogue
Notes
Works Cited
Index

The Culture of Classicism Ancient Greece and Rome in American Intellectual Life 17801910

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      View other formats and editions of The Culture of Classicism Ancient Greece and Rome in American Intellectual Life 17801910 by Winterer

      Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
      Publication Date: 6/4/2004 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780801878893, 978-0801878893
      ISBN10: 0801878896

      Description



      Trade Review
      A conscientious and important history of the study of classicism in America during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries... Ms. Winterer sheds light on the virtual disappearance of the ancients from the modern imagination. -- Rochelle Gurstein Wall Street Journal This book makes, in particular, two significant contributions to the field: it expands the scope of inquiry beyond the opening decades of the nation's history, where scholarly interest has tended to concentrate; and it shifts the focus from what has become familiar (the classicism of the founding fathers and the influence of nineteenth-century German scholarship) to what is less well-known... Winterer's prose moves swiftly and with punch, and she displays an easy familiarity with her subject matter. -- Matthew M. McGowan Bryn Mawr Classical Review Richly informative yet concise and lucid, this book is filled with interesting insight... It is, without question, one of the greatest contributions to [the field of classics in nineteenth-century America] yet published. -- Carl J. Richard American Historical Review The first full and sympathetic account of the changing role of classical education in pre-World War I America... The story told is, on the whole, one of gradual if heroically resisted extinction. -- Thomas L. Pangle Journal of American History 2003 Worthwhile reading not only for those interested in the history of the classics in American education, but also for anyone interested in the changes wrought in American education between the American Revolution and the twentieth century. -- Joseph Casazza New England Classical Journal This clearly-written and perceptive book provides the first general survey of the role of classics in the USA in the nineteenth century. -- Christopher Stray Mouseion: Journal of Classical Association of Canada An intelligent book about an important period. -- Karl Galinsky Libraries & the Cultural Record 2006

      Table of Contents

      Acknowledgments
      Introduction
      Chapter 1. Antiquity in the New Nation
      Chapter 2. The Rise of Greece
      Chapter 3. From Words to Worlds, 1820–1870
      Chapter 4. Classical Civilization Consecrated, 1870–1910
      Chapter 5. Scholarship Versus Culture, 1870–1910
      Epilogue
      Notes
      Works Cited
      Index

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