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  1. The Rhetoric of Combat: Greek Military Theory and Roman Culture in Julius Caesar's Battle Descriptions.J. E. Lendon - 1999 - Classical Antiquity 18 (2):273-329.
    Descriptions of battles in ancient authors are not mirrors of reality, however dim and badly cracked, but are a form of literary production in which the real events depicted are filtered through the literary, intellectual, and cultural assumptions of the author. By comparing the battle descriptions of Julius Caesar to those of Xenophon and Polybius this paper attempts to place those battle descriptions in their intellectual and cultural context. Here Caesar appears as a military intellectual engaged in controversies with experts (...)
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  • The Ecumenical Analytic: ‘Globalization’, Reflexivity and the Revolution in Greek Historiography.Roland Robertson & David Inglis - 2005 - European Journal of Social Theory 8 (2):99-122.
    ‘Globalization’ has become in recent years one of the central themes of social scientific debates. Social theories of globalization may be regarded as specific academic and analytic manifestations of wider forms of ‘global consciousness’ to be found in the social world today. These are ways of thinking and perceiving which emphasize that the whole world should be seen as ‘one place’, its various geographically disparate parts all being interconnected in various complex ways. In this article we set out how both (...)
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  • Los datos geográficos en la obra de Tito Livio, un estado de la cuestión.Agustín Moreno - 2012 - Circe de Clásicos y Modernos 16 (1):15-29.
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