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  1. (1 other version)History in [Demosthenes] 59.Jeremy Trevett - 1990 - Classical Quarterly 40 (2):407-420.
    It is well known that Athenian orators, when they made reference to the historical past, usually eschewed prolonged narrative in favour of brief allusions to familiar episodes from Athenian history. Perhaps the most striking exception to this custom is the long and detailed account of fifth-century Plataean history in the pseudo-Demosthenic speech Against Neaera. The main interest of this passage, however, lies not in its divergence from contemporary rhetorical practice, but in its clear reliance on Thucydides for its account of (...)
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  • (1 other version)Εκτημοροι: partners in crime?T. E. Rihll - 1991 - Journal of Hellenic Studies 111:101-127.
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  • On trial with lonely Medea.Delfim F. Leão - 2017 - Archai: Revista de Estudos Sobre as Origens Do Pensamento Ocidental 21:167-198.
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  • A Lunar People: The Meaning of an Arcadian Epithet, or, Who is the Most Ancient of Them All?Daniela Dueck - 2020 - Philologus: Zeitschrift für Antike Literatur Und Ihre Rezeption 164 (1):133-147.
    A brief scholion allusion to a “Selenite” community in Arcadia raises a question concerning this epithet and its meaning on the background of similar expressions denoting extreme antiquity. The better known term associated with the Arcadians is Proselēnoi, namely, pre-lunar, people who preceded the moon. This term is examined through several options of understanding. At the core of this analysis stands the Classical tendency to highly appreciate early periods of time and early peoples. This opens up a discussion of autochthony (...)
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  • Plato’s open secret.Demetra Kasimis - 2016 - Contemporary Political Theory 15 (4):339-357.
    The Republic’s noble lie is widely read as an endorsement of political difference that opposes the democratic ideals of its Athenian setting. Once the text’s exclusionary political realities and rhetorical structure are attended to, however, the passages no longer appear as the template for an essentialist politics or the act of political deception they are typically taken to be. What they do is lay bare the ‘artifice’ (mēchanē) by which regimes – including classical Athens – produce membership status as a (...)
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  • Conflict, People, and City-Space: Some Exempla from Thucydides' History.Claudia Zatta - 2011 - Classical Antiquity 30 (2):318-350.
    This essay considers episodes in which phenomena like war and civil strife affected, changed, and revealed the identity of the polis. Even if framed by an understanding of the Peloponnesian War and the imperialistic logic and destiny of Athens, Thucydides' History still provides us with narratives that illuminate the particular history of “minor” poleis, each with its specific events, turning points, and dynamics. Through analysis of Thucydides' historical material, this essay focuses on Plataea, Corcyra, and Mytilene and discusses the notion (...)
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  • What Is The Pride Of Halicarnassus?Renaud Gagné - 2006 - Classical Antiquity 25 (1):1-33.
    This paper proposes a general analysis of the structure and imagery of the Salmacis epigram, a late Hellenistic verse inscription recently found in Bodrum which relates the foundation of Halicarnassus and lists the achievements of the city's authors. Focusing on the first part of the poem, I argue that the epigram can be seen to trace a complex symbolic map of the city in space and time. On a first level of reference the poem's episodes of foundation are consistently represented (...)
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  • Ambivalence and penetration of boundaries in the worship of Dionysos: Analysing the enacting of psychical conflicts in religious ritual and myth, with reference to societal structure.Shehzad D. Raj - 2018 - Dissertation, University of Essex
    This thesis draws on Freud to understand the innate human need to create boundaries and argues that ambivalence is an inescapable dilemma in their creation. It argues that a re-reading of Freud’s major thesis in Totem and Taboo via an engagement with the Dionysos myth and cult scholarship allows for a new understanding of dominant forms of hegemonic psychic and social formations that attempt to keep in place a false opposition of polis and phusis, self and Other, resulting in the (...)
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  • El mythos, el logos y la historia. La reconstrucción filosófica del pasado en el mythos del Político de Platón.Giuseppe Greco - 2022 - Anales Del Seminario de Historia de la Filosofía 39 (2):289-303.
    This article considers the function and value of the mythos in Plato's Statesman. As first, I recall the context of the story and its function within the framework of diairetic inquiry about the definition of the real politician. Secondly, I point out that the formulation of the myth is based on a series of traditional stories to which a historical-reconstructive method is applied. I then highlight the ways of reasoning used by the characters in order to reconstruct a rational and (...)
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  • The European Family and Athenian Fatherland: Political Metaphors Ancient and Modern.Jakub Filonik - 2018 - The European Legacy 23 (1-2):25-46.
    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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  • (1 other version)History in [Demosthenes] 59.Jeremy Trevett - 1990 - Classical Quarterly 40 (02):407-.
    It is well known that Athenian orators, when they made reference to the historical past, usually eschewed prolonged narrative in favour of brief allusions to familiar episodes from Athenian history. Perhaps the most striking exception to this custom is the long and detailed account of fifth-century Plataean history in the pseudo-Demosthenic speech Against Neaera . The main interest of this passage, however, lies not in its divergence from contemporary rhetorical practice, but in its clear reliance on Thucydides for its account (...)
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  • Can Classical Athens Offer Lessons for a Large, Pluralistic Society?Jennifer T. Roberts - 2023 - Common Knowledge 29 (3):324-341.
    Recoiling from the power that Athenian democracy placed in the hands of the poor, the founding fathers of the United States took Athens as primarily an anti-model, whereas nineteenth-century defenders of slavery found Athens a very congenial model indeed, seeming as it did to lend a mantle of legitimacy to an unspeakable practice. After a “honeymoon period” in which democracy was idealized as the only legitimate form of government, now at the outset of the twenty-first century the alliance of democracy (...)
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  • Autoctonia, filiação legítima e cidadania no Íon de Eurípides.Delfim Ferreira Leão - 2011 - Humanitas 63:105-122.
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  • Isocrates, the Chian intellectuals, and the political context of the Euthydemus.Slobodan Dušanić - 1999 - Journal of Hellenic Studies 119:1-16.
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