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FURTHER READING
Beck, Hans. 2003. “New Approaches to Federalism in Ancient Greece: Perceptions and Perspec-
tives.” In Kostas Buraselis and Kleanthis Zoumboulakis, eds.,The Idea of European Community
inHistoryII.AspectsofConnectingPoleisandEthneinAncientGreece, 177–90. Athens: National
and Capodistrian University of Athens. Argues that the new view of ancient ethnicity as socially
constructed and instrumentalist lays a new path for thinking about the foundations of Greek
federal states.
Hall, Jonathan M. 1997.Ethnic Identity in Ancient Greece. Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press. Brought the instrumentalist view of ethnicity developed by anthropologists to the world
of ancient Greece and, in so doing, established new parameters for discussions of ethnicity in the
ancient world.
Kowalzig, Barbara. 2007.Singing for the Gods: Performances of Myth and Ritual in Archaic and
Classical Greece. Oxford: Oxford University Press. An innovative analysis of myth–ritual perfor-
mance and its relationship to political claims, with treatments of the Boeotians and Achaeans
that are highly relevant to the concerns of this chapter.
Larsen, Jakob A. O. 1968.Greek Federal States: Their Institutions and History. Oxford: Clarendon
Press. Although outdated in many ways, and embracing a strongly primordialist view of ethnicity,
this book remains a useful reference and starting point for the study of the Greekkoinon.
Mackil, Emily. 2013.Creating a Common Polity: Religion, Economy, and Politics in the Making of
the Greek Koinon. Berkeley: University of California Press. A detailed analysis of the origins and
development of thekoinonin Boeotia, Achaea, and Aetolia that emphasizes the cohesive effects
of religious ritual and economic interdependence and argues for a sharp distinction between the
koinonas a state and theethnosas an ethnic group.
McInerney, Jeremy. 1999.The Folds of Parnassos: Land and Ethnicity in Ancient Phokis. Austin:
University of Texas Press. A clear account of the oppositional ethnogenesis of the Phocians and
its importance for the emergence of a Phociankoinon.
McInerney, Jeremy. 2013. “Polis and Koinon: Federal Government in Greece.” In Hans Beck, ed.,
A Companion to Greek Government, 466–479. Oxford: Blackwell. A recent overview of Greek
federal states through the lens of network theory.