Popular Tyranny: Sovereignty and Its Discontents in Ancient GreeceKathryn A. Morgan University of Texas Press, 2003 - 324 من الصفحات The nature of authority and rulership was a central concern in ancient Greece, where the figure of the king or tyrant and the sovereignty associated with him remained a powerful focus of political and philosophical debate even as Classical Athens developed the world's first democracy. This collection of essays examines the extraordinary role that the concept of tyranny played in the cultural and political imagination of Archaic and Classical Greece through the interdisciplinary perspectives provided by internationally known archaeologists, literary critics, and historians. The book ranges historically from the Bronze and early Iron Age to the political theorists and commentators of the middle of the fourth century B.C. and generically across tragedy, comedy, historiography, and philosophy. While offering individual and sometimes differing perspectives, the essays tackle several common themes: the construction of authority and of constitutional models, the importance of religion and ritual, the crucial role of wealth, and the autonomy of the individual. Moreover, the essays with an Athenian focus shed new light on the vexed question of whether it was possible for Athenians to think of themselves as tyrannical in any way. As a whole, the collection presents a nuanced survey of how competing ideologies and desires, operating through the complex associations of the image of tyranny, struggled for predominance in ancient cities and their citizens. |
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النتائج 1-3 من 63
... debate sees tyranny not just as rule by an individual but as a phenomenon to be located in the ethical and natural world . Euripides wrote it not long after the Melian debate ( 416 B.C. ) , in which — in Thucydides ' ac- count ( 5.105 ) ...
... debate their future constitution , he char- acterizes Otanes and Megabyzus as urging , respectively , that power be placed " in the midst of the Persian people " ( es meson ) and that it be handed over " to an oligarchy . " But the ...
... debate between Theseus and the Herald in Euripides ' Suppliant Women . Much of the argument is again negative : the Herald urges that democracy is the rule of the glib speaker over the ignorant voter . Theseus responds that monarchy ...
المحتوى
Alternatives to Monarchy in Early Greece | 1 |
The Question of Tyranny in Herodotus | 25 |
The Function of Tyranny in FifthCentury | 59 |
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