Hubris

Pericles, the Parthenon, and the Invention of Athens

David Stuttard author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Harvard University Press

Publishing:27th Mar '26

£24.95

This title is due to be published on 27th March, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

Hubris cover

A new perspective on ancient Athens at the height of its powers, reinterpreting the city’s supposed “Golden Age” as a period of ruinous culture wars.

The age of Pericles, in the fifth century BC, is often described as the Golden Age of Athens. The city witnessed a flowering of philosophy, art, and architecture—including an ambitious building program, with the Parthenon its centerpiece. But as David Stuttard shows in this vivid account, the seemingly triumphant city was in fact riven by conflict and contradiction. Though nominally a democracy, Athens led a tyrannical empire. And for Pericles and his circle, the Parthenon was less a holy place than a propaganda vehicle. Its sculptures carried the message that Athenians, beloved by the gods, were nearly divine in their own right—which to many Greeks smacked of hubris.

As long as things went well, Athenian democracy appeared to prosper. But just a year after the Parthenon was finished, Athens was at war with Sparta; a plague killed a third of the population, including Pericles; and earthquakes razed much of the city. In the wake of what seemed like divine retribution, popular outrage against those accused of undermining state religion was so strong that it took the execution of Socrates to lance the boil.

Hubris offers dramatic portraits of key figures like Pheidias, who sculpted the monumental figure of Athena yet fell prey to charges of impiety; Themistocles, who built the Athenian navy but died an exile in enemy lands; and Alcibiades, the psychopathic playboy whose mercurial ego hastened his city’s defeat. To understand the Parthenon and the Athens that built it, Stuttard makes clear, we must recognize the tensions among the city’s rivalrous families, generations, and social classes, whose visions of their place in the world ultimately proved incompatible.

A wonderful book. The rise and fall of Athens in the fifth century BC may seem familiar, but David Stuttard is a gifted storyteller and the tale is not told in the usual way. Hubris offers a cultural as well as a political and military history: Stuttard immerses us in Athenian life and shows how the Parthenon, along with other monuments and artistic productions, makes sense in the context of Athenian ambitions, hopes, and fears. Teeming with fascinating details and sparkling turns of phrase, Hubris is a sheer treat. -- Robin Waterfield, author of Creators, Conquerors, and Citizens
There is no shortage of books on Classical Athens, but Hubris stands alone in its expansiveness, readability, and congeniality. Deftly interlacing politics, religion, architecture, art, and literature, David Stuttard uses his keen imagination and consummate learning to illuminate the ‘city of the gods.’ It is one of the book’s many strengths that itprovokes readers to determine for themselves the extent to which hubris brought about Athens’s ruin. One could not wish for a more vivid or more captivating guide to the tragic demise of one of humanity’s greatest experiments. -- Robert Garland, author of What to Expect When You’re Dead

ISBN: 9780674258471

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

368 pages