The Herodotus Encyclopedia. Группа авторов

The Herodotus Encyclopedia - Группа авторов


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so‐called intended audience. Aspects of the historical audience can be studied thanks to references in the source‐material. Ancient literature itself provides clues about audience behavior, such as the tears of the Athenian audience upon seeing PHRYNICHUS’ Fall of Miletus, which led to the playwright being fined and forbidden to re‐stage his play (Hdt. 6.21.2). There are also vase‐paintings in which texts on scrolls are displayed, for instance in the hands of pedagogues teaching their students. Such artifacts testify to the—self‐evident—function of literary texts in EDUCATION. The response of the historical audience can furthermore be studied via references and allusions in other contemporary works of literature. If these are present they may reveal information about the immediate reception of the text within a network of authors who took notice of one another’s work (think, for example, of the Alexandrian poets).

      Those who study the intended audience look for the ways in which authors address their audience within a work. Does the author talk to that audience explicitly, and if so, in what manner and tone? And which other signals, themes, and motifs reveal information about the audience or show that the author presented the material with a particular audience in mind? From a theoretical viewpoint, NARRATOLOGY and reader‐response criticism are useful heuristic tools to study the way in which the intended audience is addressed. By comparing their results with those of other contemporary sources and with what we know of the cultural‐historical background, it becomes possible to reconstruct at least the mindset, background, and KNOWLEDGE that authors imputed to their audiences. Finally, one can study the way in which later audiences responded to a literary text and used it for their own creative or scholarly purposes. Intertextuality and reception‐studies prove useful in revealing the impact that ancient texts have made on later generations and enable us to study the various traditions that have emanated from them.

      Not much specific is known about the actual, historical audiences of Herodotus’ Histories. An anecdote recorded by Marcellinus has the young THUCYDIDES being moved to tears when he listened to a reading from the Histories (Vit. Thuc. 54), and LUCIAN refers to OLYMPIA as a venue where Herodotus performed, hoping to attract as large a Greek audience as possible (Her. 1–2). Possible allusions in the works of SOPHOCLES and ARISTOPHANES may suggest their presence in audiences that Herodotus addressed, although the evidence is far from convincing (Fornara 1971a; Cobet 1977). We can be more certain in the case of Thucydides, who, although he does not mention his predecessor, appears to have studied Herodotus’ work and alludes to his style, in particular in his digression on THEMISTOCLES and PAUSANIAS (Thuc. 1.128–39; cf. Flory 1980; Rood 1998).

      More can be said about the intended audience that Herodotus had in mind when he composed his work. From a formalist point of view, it can be recognized in the text when Herodotus directly addresses his readers with the indefinite second person (Lateiner 1989, 30–33) and other devices such as rhetorical questions and interactional particles (de Jong 2004, 110–11). Reader‐response analysis reveals that Herodotus sought to actively engage his audience, for instance by presenting variant versions in his work and stimulating his audience to apply similar critical tools as he himself did to assess the historical value of his material (Baragwanath 2008). In doing so he also encouraged his audience to question commonly held assumptions, such as the dichotomy between Greeks and non‐Greeks (Pelling 1997). In particular, the ethnographic parts of the Histories, such as Book 2 on EGYPT, reveal a culture of competitive debate that can also be recognized in the writings of the Hippocratic schools of MEDICINE (Thomas 2000).

      Herodotus’ posthumous audiences generally praised the historian for inventing the genre of historiography and for his smooth style, but also criticized him for alleged unfaithfulness. In antiquity both attitudes were exemplified respectively by DIONYSIUS OF HALICARNASSUS, who praised Herodotus in his Letter to Pompeius, and by PLUTARCH, who accused Herodotus of telling lies in his De Malignitate Herodoti. In the ancient and Byzantine Greek tradition, historiographers generally preferred the model of Thucydides, with fewer ethnographical DIGRESSIONS, to that of Herodotus, but the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries CE saw a revival of Herodotus in the aftermath of the fall of Constantinople (e.g., Laonicus Chalcocondyles) and the discovery of the Americas (see Momigliano 1958). Nowadays Herodotus has found a wider audience than ever before thanks, for instance, to popular works of fiction (Michael Ondaatje’s English Patient) and non‐fiction (Tom Holland’s Persian Fire) that are inspired by the Histories.

      SEE ALSO: Athens and Herodotus; Date of Composition; Medical Writers; Orality and Literacy; Prose; Reception of Herodotus, Ancient Greece and Rome

      REFERENCES

      1 Bakker, Egbert J. 2002. “The Making of History: Herodotus’ Historiēs Apodexis.” In Brill’s Companion to Herodotus, edited by Egbert J. Bakker, Irene J. F. de Jong, and Hans van Wees, 3–32. Leiden: Brill.

      2 Baragwanath, Emily. 2008. Motivation and Narrative in Herodotus. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

      3 Cobet, Justus. 1977. “Wann wurde Herodots Darstellung der Perserkriege publiziert?” Hermes 105: 2–27.

      4 de Jong, Irene J. F. 2004. “Herodotus.” In Narrators, Narratees, and Narratives in Ancient Greek Literature. Studies in Ancient Greek Narrative. Vol. 1, edited by Irene J. F. de Jong, René Nünlist, and Angus Bowie, 101–14. Leiden: Brill.

      5 Flory, Stewart. 1980. “Who Read Herodotus’ Histories?” AJPh 101.1: 12–28.

      6 Fornara, Charles W. 1971a. “Evidence for the Date of Herodotus’ Publication.” JHS 91: 25–34.

      7 Fornara, Charles W. 1971b. Herodotus: An Interpretative Essay. Oxford: Clarendon Press.

      8 Gould, John. 1989. Herodotus. New York: St. Martin’s Press.

      9 Hartog, François. 1988. The Mirror of Herodotus: The Representation of the Other in the Writing of History, translated by Janet Lloyd [first French edition 1980]. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.

      10 Jacoby, Felix. 1913. “Herodotos.” RE Suppl. 2, 205–520. Reprinted in Griechische Historiker, 7–154. Stuttgart: Druckenmüller, 1956.

      11 Lateiner, Donald. 1989. The Historical Method of Herodotus. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.

      12 Moles, John L. 1996. “Herodotus Warns the Athenians.” Papers of the Leeds International Latin Seminar 9: 259–84.

      13 Momigliano, Arnaldo. 1958. “The Place of Herodotus in the History of Historiography.” History 43: 1–13. Reprinted in ORCS Vol. 1, 31–45.

      14 Naiden, F. S. 1999. “The Prospective Imperfect in Herodotus.” HSCP 99: 135–49.

      15 Pelling, Christopher. 1997. “East is East and West is West—Or Are They? National Stereotypes in Herodotus.” Histos 1: 51–66. Reprinted in ORCS Vol. 2, 360–79.

      16 Raaflaub, Kurt A. 1987. “Herodotus, Political Thought, and the Meaning of History.” Arethusa 20: 221–48.

      17 Rood, Tim. 1998. Thucydides: Narrative and Explanation. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

      18 Stadter, Philip A. 1992. “Herodotus


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