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Moses Finley

Sir Moses Israel Finley FBA (born Finkelstein; 20 May 1912 – 23 June 1986) was an American-born British academic and classical scholar. His prosecution by the United States Senate Subcommittee on Internal Security during the 1950s, resulted in his relocation to England, where he became an English classical scholar and eventually master of Darwin College, Cambridge. His most notable publication is The Ancient Economy (1973) in which he argued that the economy in antiquity was governed by status and civic ideology, rather than rational economic motivations.

Sir Moses Finley

Born
Moses Israel Finkelstein

(1912-05-20)20 May 1912
New York City, New York, United States
Died23 June 1986(1986-06-23) (aged 74)
Spouse
Mary
(m. 1932⁠–⁠1986)
Academic background
Alma mater
Academic work
DisciplineClassics
Sub-discipline
School or traditionFrankfurt School
Institutions
Doctoral students

Personal life edit

Finley was born in 1912 in New York City to Nathan Finkelstein and Anna Katzenellenbogen. About 1946, he adopted the surname Finley.[1] He was educated at Syracuse University, where, aged fifteen, he graduated magna cum laude in psychology, and at Columbia University. Although his M.A. was in public law, most of his published work concerned ancient history, especially the social and economic aspects of the classical world.

In 1932 Finley married Mary (née Moscowitz, who later changed to her mother's surname, Thiers), a schoolteacher, and the two enjoyed a happy and mutually reinforcing marriage. On the day of her death he suffered a cerebral haemorrhage, and he died the following day on 23 June 1986 at Addenbrooke's Hospital, Cambridge.[1] The New York Times obituary adds: "He had suffered a stroke the previous day, an hour after learning of the death of his wife."[2]

Career edit

United States edit

Finley taught at Columbia University and City College of New York, where he was influenced by members of the Frankfurt School who were working in exile in America. He then taught at Rutgers University.

On 5 September 1951, an ex-communist, Karl Wittfogel, testified before the House Un-American Activities Committee that Finley was a communist. On 28 March 1952, Finley appeared before the Committee and invoked the Fifth Amendment regarding his association with communism. On 7 September 1952, Lewis Webster Jones, the president of Rutgers University, announced his intention to appoint Trustee and Faculty Committees to review the cases of professors involved in government inquiries. On 15 November 1952, FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover met with Jones to discuss the cases. On 12 December 1952, Rutger's Board of Trustees resolution declared, "It shall be cause for immediate dismissal of any member of faculty or staff" to fail to co-operate with government inquiries. On 31 December 1952, Rutgers dismissed Finley.[3] Rutgers University records show:

On 3 December 1952, the Special Faculty Committee issued a report stating there should be no charges against Heimlich or Finley and that the University should take no further action in the matter. However, the Trustees, who had the final say in the matter, issued a resolution on 12 December 1952: "it shall be cause for immediate dismissal of any member of faculty or staff" who invokes the Fifth Amendment before an investigatory body in refusing to answer questions relating to communist affiliations and that Professors Heimlich and Finley would be dismissed as of December of 31, 1952 unless they conformed to the new policy. Neither chose to do so. There was protest at the decision by members of the faculty, who formed an Emergency Committee on the matter.[4]

In 1954, he appeared before the United States Senate Subcommittee on Internal Security, which asked him whether he had ever been a member of the Communist Party USA. He again invoked the Fifth Amendment and refused to answer.

Britain edit

Finley immigrated to Britain, where he was appointed university lecturer in classics at Cambridge (1955–1964) and, during 1957, elected to a fellowship at Jesus College. He was reader of ancient social and economic history (1964–1970), professor of ancient history (1970–1979) and master of Darwin College (1976–1982).[5] He gave the 1974 Mortimer Wheeler Archaeological Lecture.[6]

He broadened the scope of classical studies from philology to culture, economics, and society. He became a British subject in 1962, and a Fellow of the British Academy in 1971, and was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II during 1979. He was a doctorate adviser to Paul Millett, now a senior lecturer in Classics at the University of Cambridge.

Work edit

Among his works, The World of Odysseus (1954, revised ed. with additional essays 1978) proved seminal. In it, he applied the findings of ethnologists and anthropologists like Marcel Mauss to interpret Homer, a radical method that was thought by his publishers to require a reassuring introduction by an established classicist, Maurice Bowra. Paul Cartledge asserted in 1995, "... in retrospect Finley's work can be seen as the seed of the present flowering of anthropologically-related studies of ancient Greek culture and society".[7]

Following the example of Karl Polanyi, Finley argued that the ancient economy should not be analysed using the concepts of modern economic science, because ancient man had no notion of the economy as a separate part of society, and because economic actions in antiquity were determined not primarily by economic, but by social concerns. This text was later criticized by, amongst others, Kevin Greene,[8] who argues that Finley underplays the importance of technological innovation, and C. R. Whittaker,[9] who rejects the concept of a "consumer city".

Bibliography edit

  • Studies in Land and Credit in Ancient Athens, 500–200 B.C.: The Horos Inscriptions (1951).
  • Economy and Society in Ancient Greece (1953).
  • The World of Odysseus (1954).
  • Aspects of Antiquity: Discoveries and Controversies (1960).[10]
  • The Ancient Greeks: An Introduction to Their Life and Thought (1963).
  • A History of Sicily: Ancient Sicily to the Arab Conquest (1968).
  • Aspects of Antiquity: Discoveries and Controversies (1968).
  • Early Greece: The Bronze and Archaic Ages (1970).
  • The Ancient Economy (1973).
  • Democracy Ancient and Modern (1973).
  • Studies in Ancient Society, editor (1974).
  • The Use and Abuse of History (1975).
  • Schliemann's Troy: One Hundred Years After (1975).
  • Studies in Roman Property, editor (1976).
  • The Olympic Games: The First Thousand Years, with H.W. Pleket (1976).
  • Ancient Slavery and Modern Ideology (1980; expanded edition edited by Brent D. Shaw, 1998).
  • The Legacy of Greece: A New Appraisal (1981).
  • Authority and Legitimacy in the Classical City-State (1982).
  • Politics in the Ancient World (1983).
  • Ancient History: Evidence and Models (1985).
  • A History of Sicily, with Denis Mack Smith & Christopher Duggan (1986; abridged from the 1968 edition).

Finley was also the editor of numerous volumes of essays on ancient history.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b "Finley, Sir Moses I.". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/39807. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  2. ^ McDowell, Edwin (11 July 1986). "Sir Moses I. Finley, A Scholar in the Classics". The New York Times. Retrieved 25 August 2012.
  3. ^ "Additional Resources – Timeline (Red Scare at Rutgers)". Rutgers University. June 1994. Archived from the original on 11 December 2012. Retrieved 25 August 2012.
  4. ^ "Inventory to the Records of the Rutgers University Office of the President (Lewis Webster Jones)". Rutgers University. June 1994. Retrieved 25 August 2012.
  5. ^ Article on Finley in the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, 2004
  6. ^ Finley, M. I. (1975). (PDF). Proceedings of the British Academy. 60: 393–412. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 June 2021. Retrieved 26 March 2021.
  7. ^ Cartledge, Paul. "The Greeks and Anthropology", Anthropology Today, Volume 10, Number 3. (1994), page 4 (available online 22 October 2006 at the Wayback Machine).
  8. ^ Greene, K. (2000). "Technological Innovation and Economic Progress in the Ancient World: M. I. Finley Reconsidered". Economic History Review. 53 (1): 29–59. doi:10.1111/1468-0289.00151.
  9. ^ Whittaker, C.R. (1990). "The Consumer city revisited: the vicus and the city". Journal of Roman Archaeology. 3: 110–118v. doi:10.1017/S1047759400010862. S2CID 162690405.
  10. ^ Moses I. Finley (1960). Aspects of Antiquity: Discoveries and Controversies. New York: Viking Press.

Further reading edit

  • Derks, Hans. "The Ancient Economy: The Problem and the Fraud," The European Legacy, Volume 7, Number 5. (2002), pages 597–620.
  • Hornblower, Simon. "A gift from whom?: [Moses Finley's book The World of Odysseus: Critical Essay]," Times Literary Supplement, 24 December 2004, pages 18–19.
  • Morris, Ian. "Foreword [to the updated edition]," The Ancient Economy by Moses I. Finley. Berkeley; Los Angeles; London: University of California Press, 1999 (paperback, ISBN 0-520-21946-5), pages ix–xxxvi.
  • Nafissi, Mohammad. "Class, embeddedness, and the modernity of ancient Athens," Comparative Studies in Society and History, Volume 46, Issue 2. (2004), pages 378–410.
  • Nafissi, Mohammad. Ancient Athens and Modern Ideology: Value, Theory and Evidence in Historical Sciences. Max Weber, Karl Polanyi and Moses Finley (Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies. Supplement; 80). London: Institute of Classical Studies, School of Advanced Study, University of London, 2005 (paperback, ISBN 0-900587-91-1).
  • Shaw, Brent D.; Saller, Richard P. Editors' introduction to Economy and society in ancient Greece (with Finley's up-to-date bibliography). London: Chatto & Windus, 1981 (hardcover, ISBN 0-7011-2549-7); New York: The Viking Press, 1982 (hardcover, ISBN 0-670-28847-0); London: Penguin Books, 1983 (paperback, ISBN 0-14-022520-X).
  • Silver, Morris. of The Ancient Economy, edited by Walter Scheidel and Sitta von Reden", Economic History Services, 3 January 2003.
  • Watson, George. "The man from Syracuse: Moses Finley (1912–1986)," Sewanee Review, Volume 112, Issue 1. (2004), pages 131–137.

External links edit

  • Moses Finley at the Database of Classical Scholars
  • "Inventory to the Records of the Rutgers University Office of the President (Lewis Webster Jones)". Rutgers University. June 1994. Retrieved 25 August 2012.
  • "Additional Resources – Timeline". Rutgers University. June 1994. Archived from the original on 11 December 2012. Retrieved 25 August 2012.
  • Lancaster University Photo of Moses Finley
Academic offices
Preceded by Professor of Ancient History, Cambridge University
1970–1979
Succeeded by
Preceded by Master of Darwin College, Cambridge
1976–1982
Succeeded by

moses, finley, moses, israel, finley, born, finkelstein, 1912, june, 1986, american, born, british, academic, classical, scholar, prosecution, united, states, senate, subcommittee, internal, security, during, 1950s, resulted, relocation, england, where, became. Sir Moses Israel Finley FBA born Finkelstein 20 May 1912 23 June 1986 was an American born British academic and classical scholar His prosecution by the United States Senate Subcommittee on Internal Security during the 1950s resulted in his relocation to England where he became an English classical scholar and eventually master of Darwin College Cambridge His most notable publication is The Ancient Economy 1973 in which he argued that the economy in antiquity was governed by status and civic ideology rather than rational economic motivations Sir Moses FinleyFellow of the British AcademyBornMoses Israel Finkelstein 1912 05 20 20 May 1912New York City New York United StatesDied23 June 1986 1986 06 23 aged 74 Cambridge Cambridgeshire EnglandSpouseMary m 1932 1986 wbr Academic backgroundAlma materSyracuse University Columbia UniversityAcademic workDisciplineClassicsSub disciplineAncient HistoryAncient GreeceEconomy of ancient GreeceRoman economySchool or traditionFrankfurt SchoolInstitutionsColumbia University City College of New York Rutgers University Jesus College Cambridge Faculty of Classics University of Cambridge Darwin College CambridgeDoctoral studentsPaul Millett Contents 1 Personal life 2 Career 2 1 United States 2 2 Britain 3 Work 3 1 Bibliography 4 See also 5 Notes 6 Further reading 7 External linksPersonal life editFinley was born in 1912 in New York City to Nathan Finkelstein and Anna Katzenellenbogen About 1946 he adopted the surname Finley 1 He was educated at Syracuse University where aged fifteen he graduated magna cum laude in psychology and at Columbia University Although his M A was in public law most of his published work concerned ancient history especially the social and economic aspects of the classical world In 1932 Finley married Mary nee Moscowitz who later changed to her mother s surname Thiers a schoolteacher and the two enjoyed a happy and mutually reinforcing marriage On the day of her death he suffered a cerebral haemorrhage and he died the following day on 23 June 1986 at Addenbrooke s Hospital Cambridge 1 The New York Times obituary adds He had suffered a stroke the previous day an hour after learning of the death of his wife 2 Career editUnited States edit Finley taught at Columbia University and City College of New York where he was influenced by members of the Frankfurt School who were working in exile in America He then taught at Rutgers University On 5 September 1951 an ex communist Karl Wittfogel testified before the House Un American Activities Committee that Finley was a communist On 28 March 1952 Finley appeared before the Committee and invoked the Fifth Amendment regarding his association with communism On 7 September 1952 Lewis Webster Jones the president of Rutgers University announced his intention to appoint Trustee and Faculty Committees to review the cases of professors involved in government inquiries On 15 November 1952 FBI Director J Edgar Hoover met with Jones to discuss the cases On 12 December 1952 Rutger s Board of Trustees resolution declared It shall be cause for immediate dismissal of any member of faculty or staff to fail to co operate with government inquiries On 31 December 1952 Rutgers dismissed Finley 3 Rutgers University records show On 3 December 1952 the Special Faculty Committee issued a report stating there should be no charges against Heimlich or Finley and that the University should take no further action in the matter However the Trustees who had the final say in the matter issued a resolution on 12 December 1952 it shall be cause for immediate dismissal of any member of faculty or staff who invokes the Fifth Amendment before an investigatory body in refusing to answer questions relating to communist affiliations and that Professors Heimlich and Finley would be dismissed as of December of 31 1952 unless they conformed to the new policy Neither chose to do so There was protest at the decision by members of the faculty who formed an Emergency Committee on the matter 4 In 1954 he appeared before the United States Senate Subcommittee on Internal Security which asked him whether he had ever been a member of the Communist Party USA He again invoked the Fifth Amendment and refused to answer Britain edit Finley immigrated to Britain where he was appointed university lecturer in classics at Cambridge 1955 1964 and during 1957 elected to a fellowship at Jesus College He was reader of ancient social and economic history 1964 1970 professor of ancient history 1970 1979 and master of Darwin College 1976 1982 5 He gave the 1974 Mortimer Wheeler Archaeological Lecture 6 He broadened the scope of classical studies from philology to culture economics and society He became a British subject in 1962 and a Fellow of the British Academy in 1971 and was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II during 1979 He was a doctorate adviser to Paul Millett now a senior lecturer in Classics at the University of Cambridge Work editAmong his works The World of Odysseus 1954 revised ed with additional essays 1978 proved seminal In it he applied the findings of ethnologists and anthropologists like Marcel Mauss to interpret Homer a radical method that was thought by his publishers to require a reassuring introduction by an established classicist Maurice Bowra Paul Cartledge asserted in 1995 in retrospect Finley s work can be seen as the seed of the present flowering of anthropologically related studies of ancient Greek culture and society 7 Following the example of Karl Polanyi Finley argued that the ancient economy should not be analysed using the concepts of modern economic science because ancient man had no notion of the economy as a separate part of society and because economic actions in antiquity were determined not primarily by economic but by social concerns This text was later criticized by amongst others Kevin Greene 8 who argues that Finley underplays the importance of technological innovation and C R Whittaker 9 who rejects the concept of a consumer city Bibliography edit Studies in Land and Credit in Ancient Athens 500 200 B C The Horos Inscriptions 1951 Economy and Society in Ancient Greece 1953 The World of Odysseus 1954 Aspects of Antiquity Discoveries and Controversies 1960 10 The Ancient Greeks An Introduction to Their Life and Thought 1963 A History of Sicily Ancient Sicily to the Arab Conquest 1968 Aspects of Antiquity Discoveries and Controversies 1968 Early Greece The Bronze and Archaic Ages 1970 The Ancient Economy 1973 Democracy Ancient and Modern 1973 Studies in Ancient Society editor 1974 The Use and Abuse of History 1975 Schliemann s Troy One Hundred Years After 1975 Studies in Roman Property editor 1976 The Olympic Games The First Thousand Years with H W Pleket 1976 Ancient Slavery and Modern Ideology 1980 expanded edition edited by Brent D Shaw 1998 The Legacy of Greece A New Appraisal 1981 Authority and Legitimacy in the Classical City State 1982 Politics in the Ancient World 1983 Ancient History Evidence and Models 1985 A History of Sicily with Denis Mack Smith amp Christopher Duggan 1986 abridged from the 1968 edition Finley was also the editor of numerous volumes of essays on ancient history See also editMorris U Cohen Jack D Foner Morris Schappes Rapp Coudert CommitteeNotes edit a b Finley Sir Moses I Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 39807 Subscription or UK public library membership required McDowell Edwin 11 July 1986 Sir Moses I Finley A Scholar in the Classics The New York Times Retrieved 25 August 2012 Additional Resources Timeline Red Scare at Rutgers Rutgers University June 1994 Archived from the original on 11 December 2012 Retrieved 25 August 2012 Inventory to the Records of the Rutgers University Office of the President Lewis Webster Jones Rutgers University June 1994 Retrieved 25 August 2012 Article on Finley in the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography 2004 Finley M I 1975 Schliemann s Troy One Hundred Years After PDF Proceedings of the British Academy 60 393 412 Archived from the original PDF on 24 June 2021 Retrieved 26 March 2021 Cartledge Paul The Greeks and Anthropology Anthropology Today Volume 10 Number 3 1994 page 4 available online Archived 22 October 2006 at the Wayback Machine Greene K 2000 Technological Innovation and Economic Progress in the Ancient World M I Finley Reconsidered Economic History Review 53 1 29 59 doi 10 1111 1468 0289 00151 Whittaker C R 1990 The Consumer city revisited the vicus and the city Journal of Roman Archaeology 3 110 118v doi 10 1017 S1047759400010862 S2CID 162690405 Moses I Finley 1960 Aspects of Antiquity Discoveries and Controversies New York Viking Press Further reading editDerks Hans The Ancient Economy The Problem and the Fraud The European Legacy Volume 7 Number 5 2002 pages 597 620 Hornblower Simon A gift from whom Moses Finley s book The World of Odysseus Critical Essay Times Literary Supplement 24 December 2004 pages 18 19 Morris Ian Foreword to the updated edition The Ancient Economy by Moses I Finley Berkeley Los Angeles London University of California Press 1999 paperback ISBN 0 520 21946 5 pages ix xxxvi Nafissi Mohammad Class embeddedness and the modernity of ancient Athens Comparative Studies in Society and History Volume 46 Issue 2 2004 pages 378 410 Nafissi Mohammad Ancient Athens and Modern Ideology Value Theory and Evidence in Historical Sciences Max Weber Karl Polanyi and Moses Finley Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies Supplement 80 London Institute of Classical Studies School of Advanced Study University of London 2005 paperback ISBN 0 900587 91 1 Shaw Brent D Saller Richard P Editors introduction to Economy and society in ancient Greece with Finley s up to date bibliography London Chatto amp Windus 1981 hardcover ISBN 0 7011 2549 7 New York The Viking Press 1982 hardcover ISBN 0 670 28847 0 London Penguin Books 1983 paperback ISBN 0 14 022520 X Silver Morris Review of The Ancient Economy edited by Walter Scheidel and Sitta von Reden Economic History Services 3 January 2003 Watson George The man from Syracuse Moses Finley 1912 1986 Sewanee Review Volume 112 Issue 1 2004 pages 131 137 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Moses Finley Moses Finley at the Database of Classical Scholars Inventory to the Records of the Rutgers University Office of the President Lewis Webster Jones Rutgers University June 1994 Retrieved 25 August 2012 Additional Resources Timeline Rutgers University June 1994 Archived from the original on 11 December 2012 Retrieved 25 August 2012 Lancaster University Photo of Moses FinleyAcademic officesPreceded byA H M Jones Professor of Ancient History Cambridge University1970 1979 Succeeded byJohn Anthony CrookPreceded byFrank George Young Master of Darwin College Cambridge1976 1982 Succeeded byArnold Burgen Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Moses Finley amp oldid 1182983259, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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