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Classical Mythology
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Student Edition
Instructor Edition
Classical Mythology: Images and Insights, 4/e

Stephen Harris, California State University, Sacramento
Gloria Platzner, California State University, Sacramento

ISBN: 0072818492
Copyright year: 2003

What's New



  • The fourth edition offers fresh new translations of Homer's Odyssey and Hesiod's Theogony and Works and Days by Stanley Lombardo, making the epic tradition more accessible to students.
  • Much of the book has been reorganized for greater coherence, combining material such as the Prometheus-Trickster tradition in a single chapter on human origins and creating a new chapter on the heroines of myth.
  • Both heroes and heroines are placed in a more specific cultural context, including fuller discussions of the rituals and ceremonies associated with such figures as Heracles, Perseus, and the female devotees of Artemis (Diana).
  • Two complete plays of EuripidesThe Bacchae and Medea—now appear in the same chapter, affording a new perspective on the tragedies written by the most controversial Athenian dramatist.
  • Coverage of “The Olympian Family of Zeus” (Chapter 6) has been significantly expanded to provide a more comprehensive discussion of all the major Greek gods, with new artwork also added.
  • Virtually every chapter has been modified to make the presentation more student-friendly, beginning with Chapter 1, which includes new explanations of myth's social and political functions and illustrates these functions with works of art.
  • Hesiod's Theogony is now placed in the context of other ancient traditions of creation, with a new account of Egyptian creation myths added to those from Babylon and the Hebrew Bible.
  • An updated discussion of the Great Goddess, a figure worshiped in prehistoric Europe, now includes recent archaeological and anthropological studies.
  • New material focuses on female figures such as Ariadne (Chapter 8) and Persephone (Chapter 9).
  • New archaeological findings at Delphi, famous site of Apollo's inspired Oracle, are added to explain the tradition of intoxicating vapors that the Oracle breathed in to induce her trance-like utterances (Chapter 7).



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