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Introduction

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 September 2009

Yun Lee Too
Affiliation:
Columbia University, New York
Niall Livingstone
Affiliation:
University of St Andrews, Scotland
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Summary

At the end of the twentieth century telling people that you are a classicist – we mean someone who studies and/or teaches ancient Greek and Latin, and their cultures – is likely to produce a variety of responses. For one of the editors of this volume, being a ‘classicist’ can serve as a form of social camouflage, if a rather odd one. At one end of the spectrum, incomprehension and embarrassed amusement (‘I do Greek’ can be an effective conversation-stopper); at the other extreme, there is the (imagined) recognition of a fellow-member of the club dedicated to preserving ancient (where ‘ancient’ means nineteenth-century) values, traditions and privileges: ‘keep up the good work!’ Different but related is the reaction of the wife of an older (non-classicist) male academic: ‘a Greats man! You must be clever!’ The other editor of this volume has provoked puzzlement, incredulity, discomfort. She has been asked if ‘classics’ is to be understood in its ‘normal’ sense (she wonders what they regard as ‘normal’); if she does ‘classics’ in an ‘extended’ sense (she wonders in turn if ‘extended’ denotes Penguin Classics, and the classics of English literature); or if she does ballet or music. She has also been told on more than one occasion that it is a pity that she does not do her own languages (but she asks herself to whom can Greek and Latin actually belong).

What makes one of us more readily accepted as a classicist than the other?

Type
Chapter
Information
Pedagogy and Power
Rhetorics of Classical Learning
, pp. 1 - 15
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1998

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