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Talking Classics

The Shock of the Old

The incomparable Mary Beard is back, and she’s talking all things classics.

Why the ongoing fascination with the ancient world? This witty, approachable book asks why—for better or (sometimes) worse—antiquity continues to exert such a powerful hold on the contemporary imagination. Recalling a formative childhood encounter with a four-thousand-year-old piece of bread in a museum, Beard introduces the idea of thauma, or wonder, that kick-started a lifetime engaging with classics. It was not the canonical “greats” of ancient literature and art that initially drew her in, she confesses, but rather the more intimate, messy, and humdrum evidence of daily life in the remote past.

Confronting the uses and abuses of symbols of the ancient world, Beard reminds us that the traditions and “masterpieces” of Greece and Rome have certainly been politicized, but they belong to neither the left nor the right. Happily, no one owns the past. She warns us not to let a sense of reverence or overfamiliarity dampen the “shock of the old,” arguing that one of the most important things that classics teach us is how to grapple with complicated and controversial things. “The Greeks and Romans are long dead, they cannot answer back, and you can say what you like about them,” she reminds readers. “The simple fact that classics belong to none of us can offer a safe space to argue about the most difficult debates we face now.”

Beard welcomes everyone into classics. “It is not compulsory to be excited by the ancient world,” she writes. “But it can be a shame not to be.” This charming, sharp, and readable book from one of the world’s most entertaining classicists offers something for both new and established fans of classics, bringing new wonder and curiosity to even the most ancient of ideas.
 

Reviews

“Britain’s most beloved intellectual.”

Guardian

"The rock star scholar of Ancient Rome” 

Financial Times

“A passionate defense particularly notable for its bracing lack of old fogeyism.”

Kirkus

 “The book feels as if Beard, with her excitement and good humor, is regaling an audience. . . . [S]tudents (current, former, and future) of classical education will savor Beard’s rooted rumination on classics as both a discipline and a means of finding thauma.” 

Booklist

"Britain’s most famous classicist is at the peak of her powers.’

The Times

“Her irreverence has turned her into a national treasure. . . [She] illuminates the present through the past.”

Observer

“The reigning Queen of Classics."

Spectator

“Beard’s enthusiastic sense of wonder remains undimmed.”

The Times

: “Beard informs and entertains."

Independent

“Mary Beard may be the most popular classicist in the world."

ARTnews

Table of Contents

Introduction
1. A Sense of Wonder
2. How to be Modern?
3. Rights and Wrongs
4. The Case for Classics
Epilogue: The Boy who Breathed on the Glass in the British Museum
Further Reading
Acknowledgements
List of Illustrations
Index

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