University of Toronto Press
Babylon Under Western Eyes
About this book
Babylon under Western Eyes examines the mythic legacy of ancient Babylon, the Near Eastern city which has served western culture as a metaphor for power, luxury, and exotic magnificence for more than two thousand years.
Author / Editor information
Andrew Scheil is the Donald V. Hawkins Associate Professor of English at the University of Minnesota.
Reviews
"In Babylon under Western Eyes, Andrew Scheil has created a remarkable piece of literary criticism: by following his subject across a range of languages, eras, disciplines, and genres, he traces the history of a metaphor that is simultaneously grounded in historical thinking and that exceeds the sum of its historical parts."
Carl Kears. King's College London:
"This book is a major achievement and will contribute a great deal to critical conversations in the areas of medievalism and race studies as well as to growing scholarship on genre fiction."
Alice Ogden Bellis:
‘Babylon under Western Eyes is a fascinating study of an important word that has shaped western culture in powerful ways.’
Jay Rubenstein:
‘Scheil has done a tremendous job of winnowing a near-endless supply of material down to essential cultural grains… An ambitious, often challenging, and almost always entertaining and engaging monograph.’
M.Roberts:
‘A superb work of multidisciplinary scholarship, Scheil’s study will be of interest in a variety of academic disciplines, as it masterfully weaves together textual and historical analysis… Highly recommended.’
Mark Amodio, Department of English, Vassar College:
"An engaging and ambitious study marked by its author's singular intelligence and deep learning, Babylon under Western Eyes knits together into a compelling and coherent narrative many of the different strands of a myth that has been woven into the fabric of Western culture for almost as long as it has existed."
Haruko Momma, Department of English, New York University:
"Babylon under Western Eyes is educational in the best sense of the word. Andrew Scheil's book includes a vast range of literature, medieval, ancient, and modern, ranging from Herodotus to the contemporary genres of science fiction and fantasy."
Daniel Donoghue, John P. Marquand Professor of English, Harvard University:
"In its powerful combination of philological learning and cultural interpretation, Babylon under Western Eyes: A Study of Allusion and Myth at its best calls to mind the critical essays of Erich Auerbach. Scheil surveys the imaginative reception of Babylon from ancient Hebrew and Greek texts to recent pulp fiction and campy film. A special prominence is given to the Middle Ages, which harmonized the discordant strands inherited from the classical world. In turn the Middle Ages bequeathed a flexible set of concepts that continue to inform the way we think about the pastness of history, degeneracy, ruin, and other themes associated with Babylon."
Topics
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Frontmatter
i -
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Contents
vii -
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Illustrations
ix -
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Preface
xi -
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Abbreviations
xv -
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Babylon Under Western Eyes
1 -
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Introduction
3 - Part I .Babylon As Political Metaphor
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Chapter One. The Political Image Of Babylon In Antiquity
19 -
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Chapter Two. Political Babylon In Late Antiquity And The Early Middle Ages
46 -
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Chapter Three. Political Babylon From The Great Schism To The Present
89 - Part II.Babylon As Degenerate Archetype
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Chapter Four .The Medieval Genealogy Of Babylonian Degeneracy: The Cursed Race
123 -
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Chapter Five. The Post-Medieval Genealogy Of Babylonian Degeneracy And The Cursed Race Archetype
156 - Part III.Babylon As Sublime Topos
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Chapter Six .City Of Ruins
197 -
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Chapter Seven.Babylon And The Coordinates Of Romance
250 -
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Conclusion
296 -
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Bibliography
305 -
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Index
335