Description
This book is a thorough and lively account of the school of rhetoric led by the sophist Libanius. Cribiore depicts this educational system in greater detail and with more attention to context than anyone before her. She manages to convey the excitement of words and speech. The surviving quantity of Libanius's written work is enormous. Few scholars of late antiquity have even attempted to master it as a whole. Cribiore has done this with a sharp historical eye and a fine sense of style. She breathes life into a corpus of texts that have traditionally induced ennui or neglect. This is a highly significant contribution to the field of late antique studies. The scholarship is impeccable. Cribiore has a deep knowledge of her voluminous author. -- Glen Bowersock, Institute for Advanced Study This book will be welcomed wholeheartedly by classicists who work on ancient education and those whose interests touch late imperial culture and history. By careful reading of Libanius's vast correspondence, Cribiore pieces together the most complete picture we have of this tremendously important figure's educational activities in late antiquity. One might disagree with her, but she has done her homework, and her disputes with earlier points of view are both intelligent and clear. This is a study that has long been needed. -- Stephen Trzaskoma, University of New Hampshire
About the Author
Raffaella Cribiore is Associate Curator for Papyri and Adjunct Professor of Classics at Columbia University. She is the coauthor of "Women's Letters from Ancient Egypt, 300 BC-AD 800" and the author of "Gymnastics of the Mind: Greek Education in Hellenistic and Roman Egypt" (Princeton), which won the American Philological Association's 2004 award for the best book in classics.
Reviews
"In addition to providing insights into Libanius's achievements in Antioch, the author provides translations of 200 letters (most never before translated into English) that reflect vividly the practice of education and the world of the fourth century in the east. An invaluable contribution to the study of ancient education, this volume includes everything from Libanius's early successes in Constantinople to the challenge of student retention."--J. de Luce, Choice "Cribiore's new study of the school of Libanius offers a richly detailed view of the world of the late ancient classroom and the behind-the-scenes activities of one of its most famous teachers."--Craig A. Gibson, Classical World "This ... is a valuable--and extremely readable--contribution, which brings attention to underused and important evidence."--Gavin Kelly, Journal of Hellenic Studies "This is a work of outstanding scholarship, a thorough and lively account which I would not only recommend to classicists and ancient historians but to anyone with a broad interest for the history of education... Any review will do injustice to the book as a whole, which should be read and reread: undoubtedly the rich footnotes and bibliography will provide historians of childhood and youth with many new and unexpected facts."--Veronique Van Driessche, Les Etudes Classiques
Book Information
ISBN 9780691128245
Author Raffaella Cribiore
Format Hardback
Page Count 376
Imprint Princeton University Press
Publisher Princeton University Press
Weight(grams) 652g