The Ship of State: Statecraft and Politics from Ancient Greece to Democratic AmericaThe Ship of State: Statecraft and Politics from Ancient Greece to Democratic America. By Norma Thompson. (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2001. Pp. 246. $35.00.)

2003 ◽  
Vol 65 (3) ◽  
pp. 911-912
Author(s):  
Christina Tarnopolsky
2002 ◽  
Vol 96 (3) ◽  
pp. 625-626
Author(s):  
Catherine Zuckert

These books have similar aims and are written from a similar perspective. There are, however, important differences in content, emphasis, and form. Norma Thompson explicitly seeks to show that the Western intellectual tradition is not misogynist. One reason that it is not, she urges, is that it is not univocal. Within the tradition one can find several very different views of the character and relation of men and women. Introducing the volume he edited, Eduardo Velasquez states, “This collection of essays does not purport to give an answer to the question of what are ‘nature’ and ‘woman,’ at least not in an immediate, definitive sense. Rather, the comprehensive aim here is to reopen questions as to the ‘nature of nature,’ the ‘nature of woman’ with consideration given to the consequences of pairing some understanding of ‘nature’ with that of ‘woman’” (p. xi). A collection of essays necessarily contains a variety of voices.


1991 ◽  
Vol 16 (3) ◽  
pp. 181-201 ◽  
Author(s):  
Clifford Ashby

During the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries the orientation of buildings in ancient Greece received a great deal of scholarly attention; since that time, it has fallen from favour. In 1939, William Bell Dinsmoor made an ‘attempt to illustrate a method of obtaining more accurate information concerning the dates of Greek temples and certain details of religious practice through the application of an outmoded theory, that of “orientation”’. When this complex study, replete with trigonometric calculations of seasonal star positions met with little favour, orientation became a dead issue for several decades, only reviving in 1962 with the publication of Vincent Scully's The Earth, The Temple, and the Gods (New Haven: Yale University Press).


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