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Pity Transformed (Classical Inter/Faces) by David Konstan

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"Pity Transformed" is an examination of how pity was imagined and expressed in classical antiquity. It pays particular attention to the ways in which the pity of the Greeks and Romans differed from modern ideas. Among the topics investigated in this study are the appeal to pity in courts of law and the connection between pity and desert; the relation between pity and love or intimacy; self-pity; the role of pity in war and its relation to human rights and human dignity; divine pity from paganism to Christianity; and why pity was considered an emotion. This book will lead readers to ponder how the Greeks and Romans were both like and unlike us in this fundamental area of cultural sensibility.

Hardcover

First published July 9, 2001

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David Konstan

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701 reviews74 followers
October 14, 2024
My journey down the rabbit hole for this Sunday is the historiography of emotions and girl I’m happy to have discovered the course that has this as a mandatory text.
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