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  1. Exile, Ostracism and the Athenian Democracy.Sara Forsdyke - 2000 - Classical Antiquity 19 (2):232-263.
    This paper addresses the question of the role of ostracism in democratic Athens. I argue that the frequent expulsion of aristocrats by rival aristocrats in the predemocratic polis is the key to understanding the function of ostracism in the democratic polis. I show that aristocratic "politics of exile" was a fundamental political problem in the archaic polis and that democratic political power, symbolized by the institution of ostracism, was the polis' solution to the problem. In the archaic polis, the expulsion (...)
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  • Morals and values in Homer.Anthony A. Long - 1970 - Journal of Hellenic Studies 90:121-139.
    For the lack of forty-nine drachmas Socrates was unable to attend the costly epideixis of Prodicus from which he would have learnt the truth about correct use of words. From Prodicus' ὥραι Socrates could also have learnt the concepts and characteristic words associated with arete and kakia: these compete in that work for the allegiance of Heracles, parading their respective characteristics. Thanks to Professor Arthur Adkins we have had for the past decade a book which not only confronts arete and (...)
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  • Ephialtes, the Areopagus and the Thirty.Lindsay G. H. Hall - 1990 - Classical Quarterly 40 (2):319-328.
    Since the Persian Wars, the Areopagus had allegedly usurped certain ‘additional functions’. By removing them, and assigning them instead to the Council, the assembled People, and the jury-courts, Ephialtes undid the last institutional bastion of aristocratic political authority, and set the copestones on Athens' democratic order.
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  • “I Was Following Orders”: An Ancient Greek Archetype of Modern War Crime Legislation.Jakub Filonik, Brenda Griffith-Williams & Janek Kucharski - 2018 - The European Legacy 23 (1-2):1-4.
    This article explores the role and modes of operation of metaphorical framing in ancient Greek and modern European and American political discourse. It looks at how concepts such as citizenship, ownership, family, morality, finance, sport, war, domination, human life, and animals are used to reframe political issues in ways promoted by the speaker, and how they may continue to be reshaped in the ongoing political discourse. The analysis of examples of ancient Athenian public rhetoric and of modern European and American (...)
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  • Ephialtes, the Areopagus and the Thirty.Lindsay G. H. Hall - 1990 - Classical Quarterly 40 (02):319-.
    Since the Persian Wars, the Areopagus had allegedly usurped certain ‘additional functions’. By removing them, and assigning them instead to the Council, the assembled People, and the jury-courts, Ephialtes undid the last institutional bastion of aristocratic political authority, and set the copestones on Athens' democratic order.
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  • “I Was Following Orders”: An Ancient Greek Archetype of Modern War Crime Legislation.Janek Kucharski - 2018 - The European Legacy 23 (1-2):60-76.
    This article discusses Lysias’ Against Eratosthenes as an ancient Athenian instance of the superior orders plea, a line of defence made notorious during the Nuremberg trials, which in turn became the cornerstone of modern war crime legislation. Whereas the pre-Nuremberg jurisdiction largely embraced the principle of superior responsibility, whereby a subordinate executing criminal orders was not to be held liable for them, the trials of the Nazi war criminals brought about a complete reversal of this doctrine. While remaining faithful to (...)
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  • Lady Chatterley's Lover and the Attic orators: the social composition of the Athenian jury.Stephen Todd - 1990 - Journal of Hellenic Studies 110:146-173.
    The starting-point of this paper is one of the most disastrous pieces of advocacy in modern legal history. In October 1960, Penguin Books were prosecuted under Section 2 of the 1959 Obscene Publications Act for publishing an unexpurgated edition ofLady Chatterley's Lover.On the first day of the trial, Mr. Mervyn Griffith-Jones, Senior Treasury Counsel, did his best to wreck his case on the strength of one remark. He had previously tried to show that he was himself a man of the (...)
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  • The evidence for Apolline purification rituals at Delphi and Athens.R. R. Dyer - 1969 - Journal of Hellenic Studies 89:38-56.
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