Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 Justice to the Dead: Prototypes of the Citizen and Self in Early Greece
- 2 Performing Justice in Early Greece: Dispute Settlement in the Iliad
- 3 Self-Transformation and the Therapy of Justice in the Odyssey
- 4 Performing the Law: The Lawgiver, Statute Law, and the Jury Trial
- 5 Citizenship by Degrees: Ephebes and Demagogues in Democratic Athens, 465–460
- 6 The Naturalization of Citizen and Self in Democratic Athens, 450–411
- 7 Democracy's Narcissistic Citizens: Alcibiades and Socrates
- Conclusion
- References
- Index
Introduction
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 July 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 Justice to the Dead: Prototypes of the Citizen and Self in Early Greece
- 2 Performing Justice in Early Greece: Dispute Settlement in the Iliad
- 3 Self-Transformation and the Therapy of Justice in the Odyssey
- 4 Performing the Law: The Lawgiver, Statute Law, and the Jury Trial
- 5 Citizenship by Degrees: Ephebes and Demagogues in Democratic Athens, 465–460
- 6 The Naturalization of Citizen and Self in Democratic Athens, 450–411
- 7 Democracy's Narcissistic Citizens: Alcibiades and Socrates
- Conclusion
- References
- Index
Summary
PERFORMING CITIZENSHIP AND ITS SCRIPTS IN DEMOCRATIC ATHENS
A new field has emerged over the past fifteen years out of the perennial interest ancient historians and classicists have shown in the Athenian democracy of 508–322 bc; we might call it “Athenian democracy studies.” Reasons for its popularity are not hard to identify in an era devoted to the ideal of interdisciplinary research, but its developing contours already demonstrate how complex a topic democratic society can be, especially if we inquire into ways human subjects experience it through democratic citizenship. And so not surprisingly Athenian democracy studies are expanding rapidly right now, propelled by variety in evidence and eclecticism in methodology as scholars seek out Athenian cultural practices and beliefs peculiar to the democracy – and devise new ways to scrutinize them. For one manifestation of this variety and eclecticism we need only look to the “smorgasbord” essay collections by multiple authors that proliferate in so many fields today: major collections on Athenian democracy keep multiplying, at least in English. One effect of these collections is to suggest that scholars find it difficult to forge a single, interdisciplinary approach to the Athenian democracy. They may also encourage readers to believe – mistakenly, I think – that democratic community and citizenship are too multiform and confusing to accommodate a single line of inquiry.
About a decade ago a neat bifurcation distinguished old and new paradigms for studying Athenian democracy and citizenship.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Citizen and Self in Ancient GreeceIndividuals Performing Justice and the Law, pp. 1 - 36Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2006