Black Athena Revisited (Paperback)
$48.11 - Free delivery worldwide (to United States and
all these other countries) Usually dispatched within 72 hours | |Short Description for Black Athena Revisited Was Western civilization founded by ancient Egyptians and Phoenicians?Can the ancient Egyptians usefully be called black?Did the ancient Greeks borrow religion, science, and philosophy from the Egyptians and Phoenicians?Have scholars ignored the Afroasiatic roots of Western civilization as a result of racism and anti-Semitism?In this collection of twenty essays, leading scholars in a broad range o...
Full description- Publisher: The University of North Carolina Press
- Published: 31 December 1996
- Format: Paperback 544 pages
- See: Full bibliographic data
- Categories: Literary Essays | General & World History | European History | Ancient History: To C 500 CE | Classical History / Classical Civilisation
- ISBN 13: 9780807845554 ISBN 10: 0807845558
- Sales rank: 404,331
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Full description for Black Athena Revisited
Was Western civilization founded by ancient Egyptians and Phoenicians? Can the ancient Egyptians usefully be called black? Did the ancient Greeks borrow religion, science, and philosophy from the Egyptians and Phoenicians? Have scholars ignored the Afroasiatic roots of Western civilization as a result of racism and anti-Semitism?In this collection of twenty essays, leading scholars in a broad range of disciplines confront the claims made by Martin Bernal in "Black Athena: The Afroasiatic Roots of Classical Civilization." In that work, Bernal proposed a radical reinterpretation of the roots of classical civilization, contending that ancient Greek culture derived from Egypt and Phoenicia and that European scholars have been biased against the notion of Egyptian and Phoenician influence on Western civilization. The contributors to this volume argue that Bernal's claims are exaggerated and in many cases unjustified.Topics covered include race and physical anthropology; the question of an Egyptian invasion of Greece; the origins of Greek language, philosophy, and science; and racism and anti-Semitism in classical scholarship. In the conclusion to the volume, the editors propose an entirely new scholarly framework for understanding the relationship between the cultures of the ancient Near East and Greece and the origins of Western civilization.

