Klaus Geus and Martin Thiering (Eds.), Features of Common Sense Geography: Implicit knowledge structures in ancient geographical texts, Wien: LIT Verlag, 2014

Abstract

View book review by Brian Turner (Portland State University).

Content

69–88 Thomas Poiss, "Looking for BirdsEye View in Ancient Greek Sources", in: Klaus Geus and Martin Thiering (Eds.), Features of Common Sense Geography: Implicit knowledge structures in ancient geographical texts, Wien: LIT Verlag, 2014, 69–88
17–38 Anca Dan, Klaus Geus and Kurt Guckelsberger, "What is Common Sense Geography? . Some preliminary thoughts from a historical perspective", in: Klaus Geus and Martin Thiering (Eds.), Features of Common Sense Geography: Implicit knowledge structures in ancient geographical texts, Wien: LIT Verlag, 2014, 17–38
83–113 Gian Franco Chiai, "The Mediterranean Islands and Common Sense Geography", in: Klaus Geus and Martin Thiering (Eds.), Features of Common Sense Geography: Implicit knowledge structures in ancient geographical texts, Wien: LIT Verlag, 2014, 83–113
147–156 Klaus Geus, "A “Day´s Journey” in Herodotus´ Histories", in: Klaus Geus and Martin Thiering (Eds.), Features of Common Sense Geography: Implicit knowledge structures in ancient geographical texts, Wien: LIT Verlag, 2014, 147–156
157–198 Anca Dan, "Xenophon’s Anabasis and the Common Greek Mental Modelling of Spaces", in: Klaus Geus and Martin Thiering (Eds.), Features of Common Sense Geography: Implicit knowledge structures in ancient geographical texts, Wien: LIT Verlag, 2014, 157–198
199–218 Florentina Badalanova Geller, "Hierotopia and Ethno-Geography: (Para-)Scriptural Traditions and Landscape Perception", in: Klaus Geus and Martin Thiering (Eds.), Features of Common Sense Geography: Implicit knowledge structures in ancient geographical texts, Wien: LIT Verlag, 2014, 199–218