Numa Denis Fustel de Coulanges
Born
in Paris, France
March 18, 1830
Died
September 12, 1889
Genre
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The Ancient City: A Study of the Religion, Laws, and Institutions of Greece and Rome
by
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published
1864
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304 editions
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The Ancient Family - Imperium Press
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Cetatea antică, 1
by
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published
1864
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3 editions
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Origin of Property in Land
by
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published
1991
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59 editions
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Polybius and The Roman Conquest of Greece: How Hellenic Disunity Gave Rise to Roman Rule
by |
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Cetatea antică, 2
by
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published
1864
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4 editions
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La Gaule romaine
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Leçons à l'impératrice sur les origines de la civilisation française
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The Origin of Property in Land
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Senovės miestas
by
—
published
1864
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“The ancient city, like all human society, had ranks, distinctions, and inequalities.”
― The Ancient City: A Study of the Religion, Laws, and Institutions of Greece and Rome
― The Ancient City: A Study of the Religion, Laws, and Institutions of Greece and Rome
“Naming (“christening,” “deeming”) is more than a performative moral act; it is linguistic and aesthetic as well. Identifying the emergence and establishment of anti-sacrificial moral practices will take on a form distinctive to a particular social order; the consolidation of the originary “belief” or gesture should therefore be represented in ways that make it inseparable from the entirety of that order. Naming commemorates earlier establishments of practices of deferral, and by enhancing the self-referentiality of the social order as a whole makes it impossible to think outside of that order. It should be kept in mind that all social orders do this—orders in the liberal tradition simply deny they are doing so, and therefore do it haphazardly and in violent fits and starts. Every social order, however small or transient, develops its own “idiom,” because any exchange of signs involves the respective participants taking up the words, phrases and expressions of the others for both phatic purposes and as a “multiplier” of meanings—if I repeat what another has said with slight changes in wording and tone, I not only say what I have said, but create a complex relationship between what I have said and what the other has said (and whatever others he was responding to have said—and left unsaid), a relationship that remains largely tacit but all the more difficult to shake or exit for that very reason.”
― The Ancient City: A Study on the Religion, Laws, and Institutions of Greece and Rome
― The Ancient City: A Study on the Religion, Laws, and Institutions of Greece and Rome
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