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Splash Image

Barry Strauss

photoProfessor of History, Professor of Classics

Office: 324 McGraw Hall
Phone: (607) 255-6743
Fax: (607) 255-0469
E-Mail: bss4@cornell.edu

Personal Web Site

Office hours: T 1:00-3:00, R 10:30-11:30

Education

Ph.D. Yale University, 1979
M.A. Yale University, 1976
B.A. Cornell University, 1974

Courses

Fall 2008:
2321
Introduction to Military History
7090
Introduction to Graduate Study of History
Spring 2009:
On Leave

Recent Publications and Awards

Books

The Trojan War, A New History, Hutchinson/Random House, UK, 2007.

The Trojan War, A New History, Simon & Schuster, USA, 2006; translations forthcoming in Italian and Spanish; History Book Club, main selection.

Western Civilization: Beyond Boundaries, co-author (Houghton Mifflin). Fifth edition, 2008 [available December 2006]. (First-Fourth editions, entitled Western Civilization: The Continuing Experiment, 1994-2005.)

The Battle of Salamis: The Naval Encounter That Saved Ancient Greece - and Western Civilization (Simon & Schuster, USA, 2004, paperback 2005); Salamis, The Greatest Naval Battle of the Ancient World, 480 BC (Hutchinson/Random House UK, 2004, paperback 2005). Translations in Greek, Italian, Korean, Portuguese, Spanish, 2005-2006.

War and Democracy: A Comparative Study of the Korean War and the Peloponnesian War. Co-edited with David McCann. (M.E. Sharpe, 2001).

Salamis: The Navel Battle That Saved Ancient Greece – and Western Civilization (Simon & Schuster, USA, 2004; Hutchinson/Random House UK, 2004; translations into Greek and Portuguese forthcoming).

Western Civilization: The Continuing Experiment, co-author (Houghton Mifflin). Fourth Edition. 2004.

War and Democracy: A Comparative Study of the Korean War and the Peloponnesian War. Co-edited with David McCann. (M.E. Sharpe), 2001.

Articles and Chapters

“Why Troy is Still Burning,” Historically Speaking, The Bulletin of the Historical Society. Volume VII/Number 6 (September/October, 2006).

“The Black Phalanx: African-Americans and the Classics After the Civil War,” Arion 12.3 (Winter 2005): 39-64.

“The Agony of War Under Oars,” Naval History 19.1 (February 2005): 39-42.

“The Scholar and Teacher,” Humanities, The Magazine of the National Endowment for the Humanities 26.3 (May/June 2005): 8-13.
           
“The Rebirth of Narrative,” Historically Speaking 6.6 (July/August 2005): 1-5.

“Korea’s Legendary Admiral,” MHQ: The Quarterly Journal of Military History 17.4 (Summer 2005): 52-61.

“In the Shadow of the Fortress,” in Toivo Koivukoski & David Tabachnick, eds. Confronting Tyranny: Ancient Lessons for Global Politics. Rowman & Littlefield, 2004, 233-241.

“On Public Speech in a Democratic Republic at War.” In  Republicanism: History, Theory, and Practice, a special issue of the CRISPP (Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy) 6.1 (Spring 2003): 22-37. Also published as Daniel Weinstock and Christian Nadeau, eds. Republicanism: History, Theory and Practice (Frank Cass, 2004), 22-37.
           
“The Dead of Arginusae and the Debate About the Athenian Navy” [in modern Greek translation as well as in English] Nautiki Epithewrisi 545.160s (Jan-Feb 2004): 40-67.

“Flames Over Athens,” Arion 12.1 (Spring/Summer 2004): 101-116.

“Go Tell the Spartans,” MHQ: The Quarterly Journal of Military History 17.1 (Autumn 2004): 16-25.

“Faith for the Flight,” Arion 11.3 (Winter 2004): 129-140.

“The Dead of Arginusae and the Debate About the Athenian Navy” [in modern Greek translation as well as in English] Nautiki Epithewrisi 545.160s (Jan-Feb 2004): 40-67.

“Flames Over Athens,” Arion 12.1 (Spring/Summer 2004): 101-116.

“Go Tell the Spartans,” MHQ: The Quarterly Journal of Military History 17.1 (Autumn 2004): 16-25.

“On Public Speech in a Democratic Republic at War.” In Republicanism: History, Theory, and Practice, a special issue of the CRISPP (Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy) 6.1 (Spring 2003): 22-37.

“Alexander: The Military Campaign,” in J. Roisman, ed., Alexander the Great. Leiden: Brill, 2003, pp. 133-158.

“On National Security Strategy and American Policy Toward Iraq.” In M. Evangelista, ed. Iraq and Beyond: The New U.S. National Security Strategy. Occasional Paper No. 27. Ithaca, N.Y.: Peace Studies Program, Cornell University, January 2003, pp. 11-14.

“Reflections on the Citizen-Soldier. “Parameters: US Army War College Quarterly The United States Army’s Senior Professional Journal. Summer 2003 vol. 33.2: pp. 66-77.

“Collateral Damage: Commentary.” In Andru E. Wall, ed. The Legal and Ethical Implications of NATO’s Kosovo Campaign. International Law Studies vol. 78. Newport, RI: Naval War College, 2002, pp. 293-296.

“The Price of Rivalry.” MHQ. The Quarterly Journal of Military History 13.3 (Spring), 2001.

“Democracy, Kimon, and the Evolution of Athenian Naval Tactics in the Fifth Century B.C.” In Pernille Flensted-Jensen, Thomas Heine Nielsen, and Lene Rubenstein, eds. Polis & Politics. Studies in Ancient Greek History. Presented to Mogens Herman Hansen on his 60th Birthday. (Museum Tuscylanum Press. University of Copenhagen) 315-326.

“Perspectives on the death of fifth-century Athenian seamen,” in Hans van Wees, ed. War and Violence in Ancient Greece. (Duckworth), 261-284.

“Victory By Guile. Breaking the Siege of Constantinople” in MHQ. The Quarterly Journal of Military History 11.3 (Spring), 104-111.

“Epilogue: On War and Society in the Pre-Modern World,” with Victor Hanson in K. Raaflaub and N. Rosenstein, eds. War and Society in the Ancient and Medieval Worlds (Harvard University Press), 439-453 (1999).

“The Dark Ages Made Lighter: The Consequences of Two Defeats,” in Robert Cowley, ed. What If: The Greatest might Have Beens in military History (New Putnam), 71-92 (1999).

“Rome’s Persian Mirage” in MHQ. The Quarterly Journal of Military History 11.4 (Autumn 1999), 18-27.

“A Lighter Dark Ages,” in “What If? The Greatest Might Have Beens of Military History,” MHQ, The Quarterly Journal of Military History 10:3 (Spring 1998), 69.

“The Problem of Periodization: The Case of the Peloponnesian War,” in M. Golden and P. Toohey, eds., Inventing Ancient Culture: Historicism, Periodization, and the Ancient World (Routledge), 165-175.

“The Art of Alliance and the Peloponnesian War,” in C.D. Hamilton and P. Krentz, eds., Polis and Polemos: Essays on Politics, War and History in Ancient Greece in Honor of Donald Kagan (Regina Press), 127-140.

“Genealogy, Ideology, and Society in Democratic Athens.” In I. Morris and K. Raaflaub, eds., Democracy 2500? Questions and Challenges. Archaeological Institute of America. Colloquia and Conference Papers, No. 2, 1997 (Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company): 141-154.

Awards

Battle of Salamis named by Washingron Post as one of the best books of the year, 2004; starred reviews in Kirkus Reviews, Booklist.

Invited participant in 50th Annual National Security Seminar, U.S. Army War College, 7-11 June, 2004.

Resident Fellow, MacDowell Colony for the Arts, 2004.

Faculty Fellow, Society for the Humanities, Cornell (spring semester), 2001.

Laurence S. Rockefeller Fellow, University Center for Human Values, Princeton, 1998-99.

Lucius N. Littauer Foundation research Grant for travel to Poland and Israel, 1998.