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Hesiod's Ascra

Online ISBN:
9780520929579
Print ISBN:
9780520236585
Publisher:
University of California Press
Book

Hesiod's Ascra

Published:
26 February 2004
Online ISBN:
9780520929579
Print ISBN:
9780520236585
Publisher:
University of California Press

Abstract

In Works and Days, one of the two long poems that have come down to us from Hesiod, the poet writes of farming, morality, and what seems to be a very nasty quarrel with his brother Perses over their inheritance. This book extracts from the poem a picture of the social structure of Ascra, the hamlet in northern Greece where Hesiod lived, most likely during the seventh century b.c.e. Drawing on the evidence of trade, food storage, reciprocity, and the agricultural regime as Hesiod describes them in Works and Days, the author reveals Ascra as an autonomous village, outside the control of a polis, less stratified and integrated internally than what we observe even in Homer. In light of this reading, the conflict between Hesiod and Perses emerges as a dispute about the inviolability of the community's external boundary and the degree of interobligation among those within the village. The book directly counters the accepted view of Works and Days, which has Hesiod describing a peasant society subordinated to the economic and political control of an outside elite. Through this analysis, the book suggests a new understanding of both Works and Days and the social and economic organization of Hesiod's time and place.

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