Policing Athens

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A01=Virginia J. Hunter
Adultery
Aeschylus
Against Neaera
Against Timarchus
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Arbitration
Attempt
Author_Virginia J. Hunter
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Boule (ancient Greece)
Bribery
Busybody
Category1=Non-Fiction
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Category=NHC
Category=NHD
Central Authority
Charivari
Classical Athens
COP=United States
Corporal punishment
Courtesan
Crime
Defamation
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Demosthenes
Denunciation
Diodotus (son of Eucrates)
Disfranchisement
Dokimasia
Dowry
Ejectment
Engagement
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Flagellation
General average
Hetaira
House of correction
Household
Humiliation
Impeachment
Impossibility
Incest
Informant
Institution
Juvenal
Language_English
Law enforcement
Malicious prosecution
Metic
Moses Finley
Myrrhine
Necessity
Nicias
Ostracism
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Penology
Perjury
Phormio
Phratry
Pillory
Police
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Private prosecution
Prosecutor
Prostitution
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Public humiliation
Public morality
Punishment
Remarriage
Ridicule
Shame
Slave catcher
Slavery
softlaunch
Summary execution
Superiority (short story)
Sycophant
The Other Hand
Theft
Torture
Trial by ordeal
Warfare
Xanthias

Product details

  • ISBN 9780691655475
  • Dimensions: 203 x 254mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Jan 2019
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
  • Language: English
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From household gossip to public beatings, this social history explores the many channels through which Athenian maintained public order. Virginia Hunter draws mostly on Attic court proceedings, which allowed for a wide range of evidence, including common rumors about a defendant's character and testimony, obtained under torture, of slaves against their masters. She describes Athenian "policing" as a form of social control that took place across a range of private and public levels. Not only does policing appear to have a collective enterprise, but its methods were embedded in a variety of social institutions, resulting in the blurring of the line between state and society.
Hunter's inquiry into topics such as household authority, disputes among kin, the presence of slaves in the house, gossip in the home and neighborhood, and forms of public punishment reveals a continuum extending from self-regulation among kn and punititve actions enforced by the state. Recognizing the bias of legal documents toward the wealthy, Hunter concentrates on exposing the voices of the less powerful and less privileged members of society, including women and slaves. In so doing she is among the first to address systematically such important issues as the authority of women, self-help, and corporal punishment.
Virginia J. Hunter is Professor of History at York University. She is author of Past and Process in Herodotus and Thucydides (Princeton) and Thucydides, the Artful Reporter (Toronto).

Originally published in 1994.

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