The Herodotus Encyclopedia. Группа авторов

The Herodotus Encyclopedia - Группа авторов


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READING

      1 Travlos, John. 1988. Bildlexikon zur Topographie des antiken Attika, 446–66. Tübingen: Wasmuth.

      2 Whitehead, David. 1986. The Demes of Attica, 508/7–ca. 250 B.C.: A Political and Social Study. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

      ROSARIA VIGNOLO MUNSON

       Swarthmore College

      Analogy, a mental process that allows us to perceive similarities among events, agents, or objects belonging to different times and places, represents an important tool by which Herodotus understands reality; from our viewpoint, it provides a fundamental instrument for interpreting the texture of the Histories. Even glosses by which Herodotus underlines uniqueness—e.g., by a superlative (see Bloomer 1993)—are often markers of quantitative rather than qualitative difference and indirectly identify classes of similar phenomena. The counterpart of analogy is polarity, but objects that are opposite in one way are likely to be similar in other respects (Lloyd 1966; Corcella 1984).

      Analogy is “horizontal” when it binds parallel facts. But it also works “vertically” across different levels of reality, as in inductive PROPHECY (see e.g., the Delphic reference to CYRUS (II) as a MULE, 1.55.2) or in other symbolic associations elicited by the text (see examples in the entry on THŌMATA). Simultaneously, we distinguish analogy that is diachronic, among events belonging to different points in the CHRONOLOGY of the historical narrative, from synchronic, when ethnographic or geographic descriptions create a comparative field extending not in TIME but in space (Munson 2001, 45–133).

      In the historical narrative, Herodotus may draw attention to similarity (or polarity) by an explicit METANARRATIVE comparison, as when he opines that the democratic reforms of the Athenian CLEISTHENES imitated policies of his homonymous grandfather, the tyrant of SICYON (1.67.1). Occasionally speakers, too, compare and contrast. When either the narrator or his speakers discuss circumstances of their present in the light of events of their past (see e.g., 7.10.γ, ARTABANUS’ recollection of DARIUS I’s Scythian expedition on the eve of XERXES’ expedition against Greece), they encourage Herodotus’ AUDIENCE to apply to their own present the same or other parts of the work. Most frequently, in fact, historical analogy impresses us silently, by the resemblances that transpire from the theoretically endless variety of Herodotus’ world.

      Synchronic analogy in Herodotus is less dependent on the reader’s interpretation and very much on the surface of the text. In a geographical and ethnographic context, where difference is expected and often underlined (see e.g., 2.35.2), similarity needs explicit advertisement (Hartog 1988, 225–50; Munson 2001, 82–110). Statements that establish that something is like something else in certain respects are frequent and varied. The narrator explains foreign objects by “putting them together” (verb συμβάλλειν, 2.10.1, 4.99.5) with familiar realities, just as he “conjecture[s] on the things that are not known on the basis of those that are apparent” (verb συμβάλλεσθαι, 2.33.2, 34; cf. Anaxagoras DK 59 B21a, with Lloyd 1966, 337–44; Thomas 2000, 200–11). The NILE is unique but also similar to other RIVERS, since they all conform to the same physis (Corcella 1984, 74–84; Thomas 2000, 135–38). Faraway sites reproduce the outlines of Greek landmarks (4.99.4–5, 156.3, 182, 183.1); exotic animals, fruit, and plants each combine aspects of different domestic species (e.g., 2.71, 92.2–4; 3.102.2). Foreign foods, fabrics, clothing, buildings, and utensils resemble products from one region or another of the Greek world (1.195.1; 4.61.1). Comparisons of this kind make the exotic familiar (Hartog 1988, 225–30; Corcella 1984, 69), but are also a manifestation of Herodotus’ ideology of a patterned unitarian world.

      In the sphere of customs, the frequent similarities Herodotus points out between different ethnic groups result from common origin or mutual contact and diffusion (2.104.2–4), or emerge as unexplained "wonders" (2.79). They all represent additional signs that, in humankind as in the environment, opportunities for variation, although great, are nevertheless limited. Even radical divergences can be analogized in terms of equivalence, as when the text indicates that burning, embalming, or eating the dead all constitute a funeral (3.38.3–4). Like the far less numerous glosses of similarity in the history, metanarrative comparisons in the ethnographic sections cooperate with the effects of implicit analogy Herodotus achieves by narrative means, as when he plants familiar Greek–like features in his descriptions of alien customs (2.158.5). Greeks, Persians, Egyptians, Scythians, Babylonians, and other ethnea, hard or soft, are grouped in shifting clusters, distinct as well as mutually same when each is considered in relation to different others. The analogies Herodotus establishes among peoples’ practices and beliefs explain the actual or projected similarities in their diachronic development and historical outcomes. In both history and ETHNOGRAPHY analogy makes it possible to infer what is not known from what is apparent.

      SEE ALSO: Extremes; Geography; Historical Method; Philosophy; Science; Symbols and Signs

      REFERENCES

      1 Bischoff, Heinrich. 1932. Der Warner bei Herodot. Marburg: Noske. Partially reprinted in Marg, Walter, ed. 1982. Herodot: Eine Auswahl aus der neueren Forschung, 3rd edition, 302–19, 681–88. Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft.

      2 Bloomer, W. Martin. 1993. “The Superlative ‘nomoi’ of Herodotus’ Histories.” ClAnt 12.1: 30–50.

      3 Boedeker, Deborah. 1987. “The Two Faces of Demaratus.” Arethusa 20: 185–201.

      4 Christ, Matthew. 1994. “Herodotean Kings and Historical Inquiry.” ClAnt 13: 167–202. Reprinted in ORCS Vol. 1, 212–50.

      5 Cobet, Justus. 1971. Herodots Exkurse und die Frage der Einheit seines Werke. Wiesbaden: Franz Steiner.

      6 Corcella, Aldo. 1984. Erodoto e l’analogia. Palermo: Sellerio. Parts of Chapter 2 reprinted as “Herodotus and Analogy” in ORCS Vol. 2, 44–77.

      7 Dewald, Carolyn. 1985. “Practical Knowledge and the Historian’s Role in Herodotus and Thucydides.” In The Greek Historians: Literature and History. Papers Presented to A. E. Raubitschek, 47–63. Stanford: Anma Libri.

      8 Dewald, Carolyn. 2003. “Form and Content: The Question of Tyranny in Herodotus.” In Popular Tyranny: Sovereignty and Its Discontents in Ancient Greece, edited by Kathryn Morgan, 25–48. Austin: University of Texas Press.

      9 Evans, J. A. S. 1991. Herodotus, Explorer of the Past: Three Essays. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

      10 Flory, Stewart. 1987. The Archaic Smile of Herodotus. Detroit: Wayne State University Press.

      11 Hartog, François. 1988. The Mirror of Herodotus: The Representation of the Other


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