| Martin Bernal - 2008 - Страниц: 612
...'racially pure'. Thus it became increasingly intolerable that Greece - which was seen by the Romantics not merely as the epitome of Europe but also as its pure childhood — could be the result of the mixture of native Europeans and colonizing Africans and Semites. Chapter... | |
| Ruth A. Solie - 1993 - Страниц: 376
...became increasingly intolerable for Greece, which was seen not only as the epitome of Europe but also its pure childhood, to have been the result of the...mixture of native Europeans and colonizing Africans and Semites.24 22. Beginning with Rousseau's article (pp. 66-67 of the English edition), the theme of corruption... | |
| V. Y. Mudimbe - 1994 - Страниц: 260
...explanatory power. It was overthrown for external reasons. For 18th- and 19th-century Romantics and racists it was simply intolerable for Greece, which was seen...overthrown and replaced by something more acceptable. (1987: 2.) C CUC 11 14 *i "§jj «•£ 2 _ I g n I" C VM 11 E ° 'S.-S Bernal promotes a "Revised... | |
| Angelyn Mitchell - 1994 - Страниц: 548
...It was overthrown for external reasons. For eighteenth and nineteenth century Romantics and racists it was simply intolerable for Greece, which was seen...had to be overthrown and replaced by something more acceptable."5 It is difficult not to be persuaded by the weight of documentation Martin Bernal brings... | |
| Naomi Conn Liebler - 1995 - Страниц: 279
...be more modern than Elizabethan. As Bernal argues, "For 18th- and 19th-century Romantics and racists it was simply intolerable for Greece, which was seen...native Europeans and colonizing Africans and Semites" (1987: I: 2); in the Renaissance, "no one questioned the fact that the Greeks had been the pupils of... | |
| Naomi Conn Liebler - 1995 - Страниц: 290
...be more modern than Elizabethan. As Bernal argues, "For 18th- and 19th-century Romantics and racists it was simply intolerable for Greece, which was seen...the result of the mixture of native Europeans and coloni/.ing Africans and Semites" (1987: 1: 2); in the Renaissance, "no one questioned the fact that... | |
| Henry B. Wonham - 1996 - Страниц: 40
...It was overthrown for external reasons. For eighteenthand nineteenth-century Romantics and racists it was simply intolerable for Greece, which was seen...had to be overthrown and replaced by something more acceptable."5 It is difficult not to be persuaded by the weight of documentation Martin Bernal brings... | |
| J. Odera Oruka - 1996 - Страниц: 386
...pioneering book, Black Athena, strongly states this fact: For 18th- and 19th- century romantics and racists it was simply intolerable for Greece, which was seen...mixture of native Europeans and colonizing Africans and Semites.13 The impact of Bernal's finding is not so much that it corrects a distorted version of human... | |
| John Shea - 1997 - Страниц: 440
...people who lived in temperate climates — that is, Europeans — could really think. Thus the idea that "Greece, which was seen not merely as the epitome of Europe but also as its pure childhood, [could be] the result of the mixture of native Europeans and colonizing Africans and Semites" could... | |
| Theo d' Haen - 1998 - Страниц: 332
...Model," 81 has indeed been negated by the Aryan Model, reluctant to admit that Greek civilization was "the result of the mixture of native Europeans and colonizing Africans and Semites." 82 Greece therefore hosts many "barbarians" and allogenes - "foreigners in Greek cities with rights... | |
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