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Chapter 7 - ‘Our Mind Went to the Platonic Charmides’: The Reception of Plato’s Charmides in Wilde, Cavafy, and Plutarch

from Part II - Classical Philosophy and Rhetoric, and Their Reception

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2021

Marco Fantuzzi
Affiliation:
Roehampton University, London
Helen Morales
Affiliation:
University of California, Santa Barbara
Tim Whitmarsh
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
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Summary

This paper examines three different receptions of Plato’s Charmides – Oscar Wilde’s Charmides, Cavafy’s In a Town of Osroene, and Plutarch’s Life of Alcibiades. It focuses on their responses to the erotic and philosophical element in the Charmides. Wilde provides an example of minimal textual engagement: the name Charmides is invoked solely for its connotations of young, male beauty. In Cavafy explicit allusion to ‘the Platonic Charmides’ recasts the poem an expression of homoerotic desire, and endows its group of young men with the prestige of a Platonic gathering and Platonic love. In contrast, Plutarch’s engagement with the Charmides is implicit, and depends entirely on the reader’s ability to recognise a series of detailed verbal echoes. Plutarch denies that Socrates’ motivation was sexual, and integrates allusion to the Charmides into a broader network of allusions to other passages in which Plato describes Socrates’ encounters with beautiful young men, or the ideal relationship of a mature man with a younger beloved, in which the sexual element is entirely absent. In so doing, Plutarch “corrects” Plato with Plato, and removes what had become an embarrassment in his period.

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Reception in the Greco-Roman World
Literary Studies in Theory and Practice
, pp. 167 - 193
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2021

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