Who Killed Homer?: The Demise of Classical Education and the Recovery of Greek Wisdom by Victor Davis Hanson, John Heath, John Heath

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(Paperback)

  • Publisher: Encounter Books
  • Pub. Date: February 2001
  • ISBN-13: 9781893554269
  • Sales Rank: 131,772
  • 328pp
  • Edition Number: 2
 
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Synopsis

An in-depth study of why the Greek point of view is crucial to a well-rounded education, Who Killed Homer? analyzes how and why it is vanishing from our present-day educational system. This impassioned call to arms argues that if we lose our knowledge of the Greeks, we lose our understanding of who we are.

The literature, art, philosophy, and values of the Classical World have been synonymous with Western education itself. The traditions of the Greeks explain why Western culture is so uniquely dynamic and why its tenets of democracy, capitalism, materialism, personal freedom, civil liberty, and constitutional government are now sweeping the globe. Yet, the general public in America knows less about its cultural origins than ever, as Classical education rapidly slips away from the curricula of our high schools, universities, even our elementary schools.

The authors examine how this has come about through time and how modernism alone is not the culprit. The "keepers" of Classicism who have failed to keep the spirit of Greek thinking alive has resulted in its demise, precisely at a time when it is most needed to explain, guide, and warn the public about both the wonders and dangers of their own culture. Can the Classics and the Greeks be saved for another generation?

Publishers Weekly

"To help one's friends and hurt one's enemies is the central tenet of Archaic Greek morality," write the authors. Unfortunately, one would have preferred more of the first and rather less of the second. The authors' "enemies" are the orthodoxy-honing, text-diddling academics whom many readers familiar with the culture wars already hope will follow their Scholastic forebears into oblivion. While there is a guilty pleasure to reading the lengthy excerpts that the authors include as examples of the wretched state of academic prose, these really are dead horses, well beaten. But Hanson and Heath, two classicists, each with over two decades of studying and teaching, are luckily unrepentant philhellenes, and they offer a spirited defense of the Greeks; to a lesser extent, the Romans; and the scholars whom they admire. Neatly combating the argument that because Greeks were misogynistic, slave-owning syllogists, they can be ignored, the authors try to remind readers how to think like the ancient Greeks in matters that count. While the Greeks are often blamed for encroaching materialism, avarice, self-indulgence and soullessness, we often fail to consider the countering forces of moderation, civic responsibility and unbending moral code that governed life in a polis. Hanson and Heath shine here, bringing out numerous classical admonitions and cautionary tales from Homer to Antigone, to lessons to be learned from the Greeks at war. Free speech, self-criticism, broad inquisitiveness, democracy, individualism and the like, we are reminded, are good things. Perhaps for their next book, Hanson and Heath will ignore their colleagues and address themselves wholly to the demos. It's what Pericles would have wanted. (Apr.)

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Who Killed Homer?: The Demise of Classical Education and the Recovery of Greek Wisdomby Anonymous

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June 15, 2001: These authors have done us a great service. Summarizing Greek thought in such a positive light is refreshing in this pessimistic and iconoclastic postmodern age. Having studied Greek and using it in my profession gives me a great deal of appreciation for what these writers are trying to do for us in preserving the great tradition of the Greeks!