Al��theia in Herodotus' Histories
English


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About The Book

Herodotus' prose narrative is a constant dialogue in which opinions about a subject are exposed to its addressee the listener-reader either through the words of the historian or through the voice of his characters. His work is based on the way of knowing that is related to seeing but mainly to listening after all this historian's narrative is based on testimonial information. Herodotus writes according to: what he heard akoêi grápho (HDT II: 123); what is said tà dè legetai gráfo (HDT IV: 195); what the Greeks say katà tà legómena hyp'Hellénon egò gráfho (HDT VI: 53). In turn the addressee on receiving his narrative is invited to express his opinion as well. It is this intense dialogue between Herodotus the characters in his Histories and his listener-reader that produces an effect of a popular assembly held in a political community guided by democracy. Herodotus is a narrator in the Benjamian sense for he does not intend to construct a synthesis for the reader. On the contrary his listener-reader is constantly invited or even summoned to reflect and elaborate a personal opinion.
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Piracy-free
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