Abstract
This paper explores Spinoza’s relationship to poetry by considering two prominent allusions to classical literature in Spinoza’s political treatises. Susan James illuminates Spinoza’s worries about the dangers of poetic address. At the same
time, Spinoza relies on poetic language and citation to press some central claims. References to Seneca and Tacitus, I suggest, aim to transform the popular imagination with respect to the relationship between government, violence, and
domination. Poetic language reinforces his challenge to false solutions to the problems of violence, rebellion, and the precarity of political authority, which preoccupied early-modern political thinkers.