Race: Antiquity and Its Legacy

McCoskey, Denise Eileen. Bloomsbury Publishing, 2021.

By Al Boroto @Commotion in Race & Antiquity

March 18, 2026

This is an interesting book which primarily focuses on Hellenistic and Roman texts. It also detaches the concept of race from phenotypical appearance distancing itself from current usages of the concept. The two issues pose a clear problem. First, focusing on two imperial periods without looking at what preceded allows the writer to overlook the relationship between empire and forms of ethnic discrimination. Second, by detaching race from forms of discrimination based on perceptions of phenotypes, the book closes the door to the examination of other forms of identity building through contrast with others which do not use the social construct of race. This also conceals that racism may well be a modern phenomenon.

Posted on:
March 18, 2026
Length:
1 minute read, 114 words
Categories:
Race & Antiquity
Tags:
race antiquity bibliography
See Also:
Two Readings of the Tragic Barbarian: Hall and Saïd
Race and Antiquity
CLAS 120: Classical Diversities