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Full Description
This unique volume summarizes and reflects the work of a leading voice in the history of Classics in Britain, bringing together both previously published articles, now newly revised, and never before published work. Topics range from the school classroom to the politics of universities, and from the social uses of classical knowledge to the publishing of textbooks: although the volume as a whole maintains a particular focus on the role of books and journals in the reception of Classics, the chapters also draw on anecdotal and documentary sources to offer a vivid exploration of the more obscure corners of the world of nineteenth- and twentieth-century scholars, teachers, and pupils.
The book is divided into three parts, the first of which illustrates the utility of comparative analysis of institutions, focusing on Oxford and Cambridge in particular; the second looks at the transformative role of printing and publishing, and at the history of the Hellenic Society (1879) and the Classical Association (1903), in relation to the changing place of Classics in British society. The third focuses on pedagogy, examining textbooks and classroom activity and stressing the dialectical nature of reception, as evidenced by the resistance of pupils to their teachers' lessons. Engaging and insightful in isolation, together they offer an expansive and unparalleled overview of the history and sociology of classical education and scholarship between 1800 and 2000.
Contents
Frontmatter
List of Illustrations
Sources of Chapters
0: Constanze Güthenke: Introduction
I Scholarship and Institutions
1: Purity in Danger: The Contextual Life of Savants
2: Curriculum and Style in the Collegiate University: Classics in Nineteenth-Century Oxbridge
3: Thomas Gaisford: Legion, Legend, Lexicographer
4: The Rise and Fall of Porsoniasm
5: Renegotiating Classics: The Politics of Curricular Reform in Late Victorian Cambridge
II Scholarship and Publishing
6: Politics, Culture, and Scholarship: Classics in the Quarterly Review 1809-24
7: From one Museum to Another: The Museum Criticum (1813-26) and the Philological Museum (1831-13)
8: The Classical Review and its Precursors
9: Sir William Smith and his Dictionaries: A Study in Scarlet and Black
10: Jebb's Sophocles: An Edition and its Maker
11: Promoting and Defending: Reflections on the History of the Hellenic Society (1879) and the Classical Association (1903)
12: Scholars, Gentlemen, and Schoolboys: The Authority of Latin in Nineteenth- and Twentieth-Century England
III Schools and Schoolbooks
13: Paper Wraps Stone: The Beginnings of Educational Lithography
14: John Taylor and 'Locke s Classical System'
15: Schoolboys and Gentlemen: Classical Pedagogy and Authority in the English Public School
16: Edward Adolf Sonnenschein and the Politics of Linguistic Authority in England, 1880-1930
17: Primers, Publishing, and Politics: The Classical Textbooks of Benjamin Hall Kennedy
18: The Smell of Latin Grammar: Contrary Imaginings in English Classrooms
Endmatter
Bibliography
Index