SOUSA, E. R.; http://lattes.cnpq.br/7769798332425992; SOUSA, Edinete Rodrigues de.
Resumo:
The present article aims at demonstrating the lexical distinction that Herodotus
de Halicarnassos made in Book VII (Polymnia) which is contained in his work:
Stories, where the author differentiates between ethnos (ἔθνος) and genos
(γένος), contributing to the relation of otherness, that is, to distinguish the I
(Hellenic, European) from the other (Persian, barbarian). In this narrative, we will realize that ethnic conflicts are not exclusive to modern and contemporary
society, but that they existed even before the fifth century BC., these concepts
of "people," "race," "ethnos," "nation," were used in Greek-Persian conflicts. The
idea of building a nationalism and the perceptions of the other ethnic group as
being the strange, the evil, that comes to subjugate, where a union should take
place in favor of the defense of the territory in common already occurred in
antiquity.