Alexander the Great and Propaganda

Eilis Loftus
Monday 12 July 2021

Edited by Elizabeth Baynham, John Walsh

Abstract: Alexander the Great and Propaganda explores the use of propaganda – whether literature, coinage, or iconography – in the court of Alexander the Great, as well as those of his Successors, demonstrating that it was as integral to Hellenistic courts as it was to Imperial Rome.

This volume brings together ten essays from leading international scholars in Alexander studies. There is currently no equivalent collection which has a specialist focus of themes or issues relating to the use of propaganda in the courts of Alexander or his Successors.

  1. “Selling Alexander”: the Concept and Use of ‘Propaganda’ in the Age of Alexander — Elizabeth Baynham
  2. Alexander the Great: A Life Lived as Legend — Edward M. Anson
  3. Ptolemaic Propaganda in Alexander’s Visit to Ammon –Frances Pownall
  4. The ‘Pursuit’ of Kings: Imitatio Alexandri in Arrian’s Darius and Bessos ‘Chase Scenes’ — Timothy Howe
  5. The Bias of Hieronymus: A Source Critical Analysis of Diodorus 18.8-18 — John Walsh
  6. At the Court of Antigonus Gonatas, the Heir of two Dynasties — Franca Landucci
  7. Alexander at Naqš-i Rustam? Persia and the Macedonians — Sabine Müller
  8. The Man Who Would be King: Alexander Between Gaugamela and Persepolis — Hugh Bowden
  9. Desertions and the Rise and Fall of Rulers in Hellenistic Macedonia — Joseph Roisman
  10. Coinage as Propaganda: Alexander and His Successors — Pat Wheatley & Charlotte Dunn

Published 2021 by Routledge

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