Erich S. Gruen
Erich Stephen Gruen is an American classicist and ancient historian. He was the Gladys Rehard Wood Professor of History and Classics at the University of California, Berkeley, where he taught full-time from 1966 until 2008. He served as president of the American Philological Association in 1992.Biography
Born in Vienna, he received BAs from Columbia University and Oxford University, and the PhD from Harvard University, in 1964. He also received the prestigious Rhodes Scholarship.
His earlier work focussed on the later Roman Republic, and culminated in The Last Generation of the Roman Republic, a work often cited as a response to Ronald Syme's The Roman Revolution. Gruen's argument is that the Republic was not in decay, and so not necessarily in need of "rescue" by Caesar Augustus and the institutions of the Empire. He later worked on the Hellenistic period and on Judaism in the classical world.
Gruen taught what was purportedly his final undergraduate lecture course, The Hellenistic World, in the Fall of 2006. Despite his retirement from full-time teaching, he continues to oversee doctoral dissertations and is widely sought for visiting professorships. In addition to U.C. Berkeley, Gruen has taught at Harvard University, the University of Colorado at Boulder, and Cornell University. He says that his most inspirational teaching experience, however, was a brief stint instructing prisoners at San Quentin State Prison in the late 2000s. At Berkeley, his students have included Kenneth Sacks.
Gruen received the Austrian Cross of Honour for Science and Art in 1998.Books
- Roman Politics and the Criminal Courts, 149-78 BC
- The Image of Rome
- Imperialism in the Roman Republic
- The Roman Republic
- The Last Generation of the Roman Republic
- The Hellenistic World and the Coming of Rome, 2 vols.
- Studies in Greek Culture and Roman Policy )
- Culture and National Identity in Republican Rome
- Images and Ideologies: Self-Definition in the Hellenistic World
- Hellenistic Constructs: Essays in Culture, History, and Historiography
- Heritage and Hellenism: The Reinvention of Jewish Tradition
- Diaspora: Jews amidst Greeks and Romans
- Rethinking the Other in Antiquity