Preface |
|
xiii | |
Abbreviations |
|
xv | |
Introduction Why Dissent? Why Athens? |
|
3 | (11) |
|
The Problem of Dissent: Criticism as Contest |
|
|
14 | (38) |
|
Beginning at a Dead End: Ps.-Xenophon Political Regime of the Athenians |
|
|
14 | (13) |
|
Democracy as Demotic Self-Interest |
|
|
16 | (4) |
|
Public Pleasures and Private Perversity |
|
|
20 | (3) |
|
What Is to Be Done? Ps.-Xenophon's aporia |
|
|
23 | (4) |
|
Dissident Texts and Their Democratic Contexts |
|
|
27 | (14) |
|
Critical versus Democratic Discourse |
|
|
28 | (5) |
|
|
33 | (3) |
|
J. L. Austin and Performative Political Speech |
|
|
36 | (3) |
|
Why Democracy Begets Dissent |
|
|
39 | (2) |
|
The Company of Athenian Critics |
|
|
41 | (11) |
|
A Competitive Community of Interpretation |
|
|
43 | (5) |
|
Immanent versus Rejectionist Critics? |
|
|
48 | (4) |
|
Public Speech and Brute Fact: Thucydides |
|
|
52 | (70) |
|
|
52 | (20) |
|
Historical Knowledge: erga versus logoi |
|
|
53 | (10) |
|
Three Models of State Power: The ``Archaeology'' |
|
|
63 | (4) |
|
Human Nature: Individual and Collective Interests |
|
|
67 | (3) |
|
|
70 | (2) |
|
Justice and Interest I: The Corcyra/Corinth Debate |
|
|
72 | (7) |
|
Leadership in Democratic Athens |
|
|
79 | (15) |
|
Themistocles and the Value of Foresight |
|
|
79 | (2) |
|
Pericles' First Assembly Speech |
|
|
81 | (2) |
|
The Fragility of Greatness: Funeral Oration of Pericles |
|
|
83 | (6) |
|
The Last Days of Pericles |
|
|
89 | (5) |
|
Justice and Interest II: The Mytilenean Debate |
|
|
94 | (10) |
|
Disastrous Consensus: The Sicilian Debate |
|
|
104 | (18) |
|
Speeches of Nicias and Alcibiades |
|
|
107 | (6) |
|
|
113 | (9) |
|
Essence and Enactment: Aristophanes Ecclesiazusae |
|
|
122 | (34) |
|
Comic Theater as Political Criticism |
|
|
122 | (6) |
|
The Comic Poet and His Critical Genre |
|
|
123 | (3) |
|
|
126 | (2) |
|
|
128 | (6) |
|
|
134 | (13) |
|
Nature versus Political Culture |
|
|
135 | (5) |
|
Persuasion versus Perception |
|
|
140 | (2) |
|
|
142 | (3) |
|
Nomos and psephisma: Old and New |
|
|
145 | (2) |
|
|
147 | (9) |
|
Justice, Knowledge, Power: Plato Apology, Crito, Gorgias, Republic |
|
|
156 | (92) |
|
Plato and Socrates in Athens |
|
|
156 | (9) |
|
Modern Contextualist Readings |
|
|
156 | (6) |
|
Toward Political Philosophy: The Seventh Letter |
|
|
162 | (3) |
|
|
165 | (25) |
|
|
166 | (13) |
|
|
179 | (5) |
|
A Socratic Code of Ethical Criticism |
|
|
184 | (6) |
|
In Dubious Battle: Gorgias |
|
|
190 | (24) |
|
Gorgias versus Apology and Crito |
|
|
191 | (2) |
|
|
193 | (4) |
|
Callicles and Erotic Proportions |
|
|
197 | (9) |
|
Socrates' Political techne |
|
|
206 | (8) |
|
A Polis Founded in Speech: Republic |
|
|
214 | (34) |
|
|
215 | (3) |
|
|
218 | (5) |
|
Obedience Training: The Education of the Guards |
|
|
223 | (9) |
|
From logos to ergon: Philosopher-Rulers |
|
|
232 | (8) |
|
Republic versus Apology and Crito |
|
|
240 | (8) |
|
Eloquence, Leadership, Memory: Isocrates Antidosis and Areopagiticus |
|
|
248 | (42) |
|
A Rhetorician among the Critics |
|
|
248 | (8) |
|
Isocrates' Verbal Monument to Himself: Antidosis |
|
|
256 | (21) |
|
A Novel Oration and Its Imagined Audience |
|
|
257 | (3) |
|
Isocrates' Mimesis of Socrates |
|
|
260 | (4) |
|
Great Men in the Democratic Polis |
|
|
264 | (4) |
|
Timotheus and the Impossible Priority of praxis |
|
|
268 | (5) |
|
The Corruption of Language |
|
|
273 | (4) |
|
Restoring the politeia: Areopagiticus |
|
|
277 | (9) |
|
|
278 | (2) |
|
Dodging the Oligarchic Tarbrush |
|
|
280 | (2) |
|
Hierarchy, Patronage, and Oversight |
|
|
282 | (4) |
|
The Rhetorician and the Democracy |
|
|
286 | (4) |
|
Political Animals, Actual Citizens, and the Best Possible Polis: Aristotle Politics |
|
|
290 | (62) |
|
Aristotle in and out of Athens |
|
|
290 | (5) |
|
The Politics in Its Fourth-Century Context |
|
|
291 | (2) |
|
|
293 | (2) |
|
The Natural Polis: Political Animals and Others |
|
|
295 | (21) |
|
|
301 | (9) |
|
|
310 | (6) |
|
Who Should Rule the Polis? |
|
|
316 | (12) |
|
Oligarchy versus Democracy (Politics 3.8-10) |
|
|
316 | (3) |
|
Aristocracy versus Democracy (Politics 3.11-13) |
|
|
319 | (5) |
|
Democracy/Aristocracy versus Monarchy (Politics 3.15) |
|
|
324 | (4) |
|
Political Sociology and Its Limits |
|
|
328 | (11) |
|
Economic Class as an Analytic Category |
|
|
330 | (2) |
|
|
332 | (7) |
|
|
339 | (13) |
|
Potential Citizens = Actual Citizens |
|
|
340 | (2) |
|
National Character and the Role of Kingship |
|
|
342 | (2) |
|
Slave Laborers and the Economics of eudaimonia |
|
|
344 | (3) |
|
|
347 | (5) |
|
The Dialectics of Dissent: Criticism as Dialogue |
|
|
352 | (23) |
|
An Arbitrator among the Critics: Ps.-Aristotle Political Regime of the Athenians |
|
|
352 | (12) |
|
Correct and Final Democracy? |
|
|
352 | (4) |
|
Seizing the Middle Ground |
|
|
356 | (4) |
|
The Duty of the Good Citizen |
|
|
360 | (4) |
|
Theophrastus' ``Oligarchic Man'' and the Paradox of Intellectualism |
|
|
364 | (5) |
|
The Power of Ideas? Toward a Critical Democratic Discourse |
|
|
369 | (6) |
Bibliography |
|
375 | (28) |
Index Locorum |
|
403 | (6) |
General Index |
|
409 | |