Picture of author.

For other authors named Edith Hall, see the disambiguation page.

33+ Works 937 Members 13 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Edith Hall is a research professor of Classics and Drama at Royal Holloway, University of London
Image credit: Edith Hall

Works by Edith Hall

Aristotle's Way: How Ancient Wisdom Can Change Your Life (2018) — Author — 294 copies, 6 reviews
Images of the Greek Theatre (1995) 41 copies
Los griegos antiguos (2015) 21 copies, 1 review

Associated Works

The Bacchae and Other Plays (0413) — Introduction, some editions — 1,387 copies, 11 reviews
Greek Tragedy (1961) — Foreword, some editions — 402 copies, 1 review
4 Plays: Electra / Helen / Hippolytus / Medea (1997) — Introduction — 242 copies, 1 review
The Cambridge Companion to Greek Tragedy (1997) — Contributor — 196 copies
The Meaning of the Library: A Cultural History (2015) — Contributor — 190 copies, 1 review
4 Plays: Bacchae / Iphigenia in Aulis / Iphigenia in Tauris / Rhesus (2000) — Introduction, some editions — 187 copies
The Cambridge Illustrated History of Ancient Greece (1998) — Contributor — 161 copies, 1 review
Black Athena Revisited (1996) — Contributor — 119 copies, 1 review
War and Society in the Greek World (1993) — Contributor — 32 copies
A Companion to Classical Receptions (2008) — Contributor — 29 copies
Tragedy and the Tragic: Greek Theatre and Beyond (1996) — Contributor — 22 copies
Greeks and Barbarians (2001) — Contributor — 15 copies
A Companion to Sophocles (2012) — Contributor — 11 copies
The Cambridge Companion to Greek Comedy (2014) — Contributor — 11 copies
A companion to Greek literature (2015) — Contributor — 10 copies
African Athena: New Agendas (2011) — Contributor — 10 copies
Greek Theatre in the Fourth Century BC (2014) — Contributor — 6 copies
Hellenistic Oratory: Continuity and Change (2013) — Contributor — 6 copies
Antigone on the Contemporary World Stage (2011) — Contributor — 5 copies
Ancient Greek Women in Film (2013) — Contributor — 4 copies
Patriarchal Moments: Reading Patriarchal Texts (2015) — Contributor — 4 copies
Performance Culture and Athenian Democracy (1999) — Contributor — 4 copies
Parchments of Gender: Deciphering the Body of Antiquity (1998) — Contributor — 4 copies
Tony Harrison and the Classics (2022) — Contributor — 3 copies
Classics and Irish Politics, 1916-2016 (2020) — Contributor — 2 copies
The Greeks [2016 video] (2016) — Narrator — 2 copies
Choruses, Ancient and Modern (2013) — Contributor — 2 copies
Seamus Heaney and the classics : Bann Valley muses (2019) — Contributor — 2 copies
Handel : Semele : 2024/25 [programme] (2025) — Contributor [Handel, Ovid and the birth of musical drama] — 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1959
Gender
female
Education
University of Oxford (Wadham College ∙ BA ∙ Classics & Modern languages ∙ 1982)
University of Oxford (St Hugh's College ∙ D Phil ∙ 1988)
Occupations
university professor
Organizations
Royal Holloway University
Archive of Performances of Greek & Roman Drama
King's College London
Awards and honors
Academy of Europe (2014)
Humboldt Research Award (2012)
Short biography
Edith Hall is a British scholar of classics, specializing in ancient Greek literature and cultural history. She is a professor in the Department of Classics and Centre for Hellenic Studies at King's College London. Previously, she held a chair at Royal Holloway, University of London. She also co-founded and is consultant director of the Archive of Performances of Greek and Roman Drama at Oxford University. In 2012, she was awarded a Humboldt Research Award to study ancient Greek theater in the Black Sea area.
Nationality
UK
Map Location
England, UK

Members

Reviews

13 reviews
In Book 21 of the Iliad Achilles has a violent confrontation with the nonhuman world. Overcome with wrath after the death of Patroclus, he sets about annihilating his Trojan enemies, piling their bodies into the River Scamander in such numbers that, choked with corpses, the water stops flowing. The river implores Achilles to halt his murderous spree before retaliating, summoning its waters in a deluge that threatens to sweep the hero away. In her 2023 translation of the Iliad Emily Wilson show more rendered Scamander’s rebuke with agonising plainness: ‘This is too much.’

The Iliad, a poem shaped by the excesses of warfare, production, and environmental degradation, exposes the limits of what the planet can bear. That, at least, is the argument advanced by Edith Hall in Epic of the Earth, the first substantial ecocritical study of Homer. Much like the Iliad itself, Epic of the Earth ‘looks backwards and forwards in time’. It illuminates the ideologies that underpinned the Homeric world and makes the compelling case that, if used ‘to expose the deepest contradictions underlying the environmental crisis that we humans have created’, the Iliad can help in the struggle against ecological collapse. Can it?

Read the rest of the review at https://www.historytoday.com/archive/review/epic-earth-edith-hall-review

Abigail Bleach
is a medievalist and ecocritic based at the University of Manchester.
show less
So I went backward. I read what books on the ancient world I could find, as they there what I had. I learned but it was disjointed and understanding came in fits and starts.

Then I read this book.

The tone and voice is perfect. It is not and does not claim to be the ultimate book on the subject. It's a very good and effective introduction. It's written well and introduces what you need to know to continue study.

More over it sets you up for further study. The opening information includes two show more detailed maps and a timeline for reference. At the end each chapter has it's own list of references to pick up if a topic caught your eye and you want to know more.

But the brilliance that most impressed me is the habit of connecting and explaining events and populations. This is a vibrant, interactive and dynamic world. It's alive and active and passionate. And she is somehow able to bring that off the page.

This is how an introduction book is written.
show less
When writing a book like this, there’s a fine line between 1) staying true to the philosophical complexity of the original thinker, and 2) presenting those views in a simplified manner for popular consumption. Edith Hall perhaps leans a little too far to the latter, but I can’t fault any author for trying to popularize Aristotle’s ethical system for wider familiarity and practice.

It is much needed. Religion is losing its appeal, which is a good thing, but for some people this has show more created a gap. People need a framework from which they can act, and ancient Greek philosophy can provide this framework.

In fact, I’m usually surprised when I hear of the conflict between religion and science as if there is not an extensive philosophical literature concerning moral behavior. So again, any author that can bring this to popular attention is performing a great service. This has been done with Stoicism but not, as far as I know, with Aristotle’s virtue ethics.

Hall does a reasonable job of presenting Aristotle’s philosophy as a new way to envision ethics that stands in sharp contrast to modern moral discourse. Rather than thinking in terms of universal laws or obligations or theoretical calculations, morality is presented as a more personal endeavor tied to virtue, behavior, habit, and inner contentment and happiness. Hall covers most of the main ideas and does particularly good job in the first few chapters on happiness and potential.

Where the book at times falls flat is with the monotonous and vapid contemporary examples where she overextends what Aristotle would have thought, for example, about how to craft a cover letter for a job. She also apparently has a very superficial understanding of Stoicism, as she called it “a rather superficial and grim affair. It requires the suppression of emotions and physical appetites. It recommends the resigned acceptance of misfortune, rather than active, practical engagement with the fascinating fine-grained business of everyday living and problem-solving”

This is simply not true, and is a common misconception of Stoicism, an easy and superficial criticism. Stoicism recommends the acceptance of what one cannot control, not the resignation from the business of everyday living and problem-solving. If this were true, Marcus Aurelius would not have been the emperor of Rome!

There is a difference between actively working to solve problems within your control and not worrying about that which you cannot control. This is not complete resignation. And, what’s most ironic is that, later in the book, Hall writes “Time spent worrying about things you cannot change is wasted.” That’s a very stoic thing to write from an author that 50 pages earlier called the philosophy a “superficial and grim affair.” In fact, much of Aristotle’s teachings were consistent with Stoicism in many ways (while differing in less important ways).

Overall, this is decent book if you have little knowledge of Aristotle and virtue ethics, but after the first few chapters the quality and insightfulness drastically decline.
show less
Ancient Greece culture is one of the pillars of modern Western civilization, and this book is a great introduction to almost two thousand years of history that still shapes our culture.

The author lays out in the very beginning of the book what she considers as the essential components of ancient Greek culture and character, and then proceeds in chronological fashion to show us how parts of ancient Greek history relates to those components. It is not easy to summarize such a long segment of show more history in only a few hundred pages, but within these constraints, this book does a splendid job, becoming almost a page-turner.

I found some parts of the book not detailed enough, for example the period and events surrounding Hypatia deserve more details, but that's the mathematician in me speaking. There are so many fascinating periods, events, characters in this history, it is indeed very difficult to be fair to all of them. All in all, this book helped me fill in many blanks for me, because before this book, my knowledge of ancient Greece were limited to my readings on history of philosophy, mathematics and medicine; that is somewhat patchy and fragmentary.

I can easily recommend this book to the curious readers who want a very easy to follow introduction to ancient Greek culture and history, a coherent guide to this important period of our civilization. A few laughs and smiles are almost guaranteed and some of the characters you will find so alive as if ready to jump from those pages to you, lecturing on their current events. Finally, suggested reading and notes section are also very valuable for guiding the readers so that they can satisfy their appetite for more history.
show less

Lists

Awards

You May Also Like

Associated Authors

Fiona MacIntosh Editor, Contributor
Eric Handley Contributor
Amanda Wrigley Editor, Contributor
Pantelis Michelakis Contributor, Editor
Rosie Wyles Contributor, Editor
Oliver Taplin Contributor, Editor
Justine McConnell Editor, Contributor
Richard Alston Editor, Contributor
Phiroze Vasunia Contributor, Editor
Lorna Hardwick Contributor
Ruth Webb Contributor
Eric Csapo Contributor
John Jory Contributor
M. S. Silk Contributor
G. M. Sifakis Contributor
Jane L. Lightfoot Contributor
Elaine Fantham Contributor
Thomas Falkner Contributor
Walter Puchner Contributor
Peter Wilson Contributor
Kostas Valakas Contributor
Catharine Edwards Contributor
Charlotte Roueché Contributor
Sofia Frade Contributor
Margaret Reynolds Contributor
David Wiles Contributor
Helene Foley Contributor
Simon Perris Contributor
Patrice Rankine Contributor
Leanne Hunnings Contributor
S. Sara Monoson Contributor
Mary-Kay Gamel Contributor
Adam Ganz Contributor
Anna Ljunggren Contributor
Froma I. Zeitlin Contributor
Katharine Worth Contributor
Kathleen Riley Contributor
Giorgio Amitrano Contributor
Sebastian Matzner Contributor
Helen Eastman Contributor
Peter Brown Contributor
Efrossini Spentzou Contributor
M. Eleanor Irwin Contributor
Roland Mayer Contributor
Liz Gloyn Contributor
Judith P. Hallett Contributor
Laetitia Parker Contributor
Rowena Fowler Contributor
Barbara K. Gold Contributor
Catharine P. Roth Contributor
Barbara F. McManus Contributor
Jennifer Wallace Contributor
Lydia Langerwerf Contributor
Alessandra Zanobi Contributor
Blake Morrison Contributor
Simon Goldhill Contributor
David Lupher Contributor
Zachary Dunbar Contributor
Yvette Hunt Contributor
T. P. Wiseman Contributor
J. Michael Walton Contributor
Pat Easterling Contributor
Felix Budelmann Contributor
Emily Greenwood Contributor
Helene P. Foley Contributor
Anton Bierl Contributor
Paul Monaghan Contributor
Margaret Malamud Contributor
Inga-Stina Ewbank Contributor
Charles Martindale Contributor
John Hilton Contributor
Massimo Fusillo Contributor
Costas Panayotakis Contributor
Regine May Contributor
Michael Ewans Contributor
Rush Rehm Contributor
Stephen Hodkinson Contributor
Ahuvia Kahane Contributor
Karin Schlapbach Contributor
Susanna Phillippo Contributor
Janet Huskinson Contributor
Brycchan Carey Contributor
Yopie Prins Contributor
Freddy Decreus Contributor
Elizabeth Vandiver Contributor
William Fitzgerald Contributor
Kelly L. Wrenhaven Contributor
Boris Nikolsky Contributor
Deborah Kamen Contributor
Matthew Steggle Contributor
James Thorne Contributor
Ewen Bowie Contributor
Deborah H. Roberts Contributor
Francesca Schironi Contributor
Martina Treu Contributor
gonda van steen Contributor
Erin Mee Contributor
Angeliki Varakis Contributor
Sean O'Brien Contributor
Duccio Sacchi Translator
Daniel Najmías Translator

Statistics

Works
33
Also by
54
Members
937
Popularity
#27,411
Rating
3.8
Reviews
13
ISBNs
105
Languages
7
Favorited
1

Charts & Graphs