Classicism
How the West Invented the Ancient World
Marchella Ward(Author)
Pluto Press
Will be published approx. on 20. January 2027
Book
Paperback/Softback
368 pages
978-0-7453-5251-0 (ISBN)
Description
We've been sold a story about the ancient world: Greece gave us democracy, Rome gave us law, and the West inherited the lot. It's a neat, noble timeline. It is also a dangerous lie. In Classicism: How the West Invented the Ancient World, Marchella Ward reveals this specific version of history for what it really is: not a neutral record of facts, but the structural foundation for modern Islamophobia.
What links the genocides of the Palestinians in Gaza, the Uyghurs in East Turkestan, and Muslim populations in India? In a word, 'classicism'-the dominant narrative of world history in which nations and peoples find their origins in a pre-Islamic time. Muslims are, in this narrative, a people without ancient history: scandalous outsiders who threaten the myth of the nation.
Urgent, accessible, and unapologetic, Classicism demands a counter-narrative to the standard Western script. Ward finds the building blocks for this new history in Islamism, long positioned as the enemy, but here offering vital provocations towards a better world not just for Muslims but for all those living on the underside of colonial modernity.
What links the genocides of the Palestinians in Gaza, the Uyghurs in East Turkestan, and Muslim populations in India? In a word, 'classicism'-the dominant narrative of world history in which nations and peoples find their origins in a pre-Islamic time. Muslims are, in this narrative, a people without ancient history: scandalous outsiders who threaten the myth of the nation.
Urgent, accessible, and unapologetic, Classicism demands a counter-narrative to the standard Western script. Ward finds the building blocks for this new history in Islamism, long positioned as the enemy, but here offering vital provocations towards a better world not just for Muslims but for all those living on the underside of colonial modernity.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Product notice
Paperback (UK-trade)
Dimensions
Height: 198 mm
Width: 129 mm
ISBN-13
978-0-7453-5251-0 (9780745352510)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Marchella Ward is Lecturer in Classical Studies at the Open University. Her work focuses on the politics of the past, centering decoloniality and the role of historical practice in solidarity with the occupied and the oppressed. She is the author of several books, including Classical Reception: A Very Short Introduction, and her writing has appeared in the Guardian and the Times Literary Supplement. She is the founder of the Society for the Study of the Past, a new global subject organisation dedicated to history as a tool of solidarity, and a co-host of the Radio ReOrient podcast on the New Books Network.
Content
Acknowledgments
Before the Beginning
Introduction (or: How to Classicise)
Part One: Clearing Classicism
1. The Muslim at the End of the World
2. Inventing Nations
3. Against Genealogy
Part Two: Dreaming Counter-Classicism
4. The Muslim Strikes (Epistemologically) Back
5. The Perils of Muslim Classicism
6. Islamism as Historiography
Afterword: The Scope of Classicism
Works Cited
Before the Beginning
Introduction (or: How to Classicise)
Part One: Clearing Classicism
1. The Muslim at the End of the World
2. Inventing Nations
3. Against Genealogy
Part Two: Dreaming Counter-Classicism
4. The Muslim Strikes (Epistemologically) Back
5. The Perils of Muslim Classicism
6. Islamism as Historiography
Afterword: The Scope of Classicism
Works Cited