Tyranny and Democracy in Isocrates and Xenophon

IF 0.2 3区 历史学 0 CLASSICS
F. Pownall
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Thucydides famously states in the methodological introduction to his history (1.20.1) that “people tend to accept uncritically oral traditions of the past handed down to them, even when these concern their own country”. As an example, he cites the popular but mistaken belief in Athens that Harmodius and Aristogeiton liberated the city from the Peisistratid tyranny by assassinating Hipparchus (1.20.2), and develops at length his refutation of this historical misconception in a flashback situated in a narrative context redolent not only of tyranny, but also of democratic power and imperialism.1 It is no coincidence that the so-called tyrannicides very early on became associated with not only the expulsion of the tyrants, but also with the foundation of democracy in Athens (inconvenient intervening events having been excised from the collective memory of the Athenians). After the brief oligarchical interludes at the end of the fifth century, the Athenian democracy was refounded in the wake of the polis’ liberation from a new set of rulers popularly identified as tyrants, the Thirty. It is in this late fifth-century historical context that the foundation narrative of the Athenian democracy privileging the role of the tyrannicides was newly enshrined,2 and public discourse on tyranny consisted generally of knee-jerk reactions of the demos, such as the
伊索克拉底与色诺芬的暴政与民主
修昔底德在其历史的方法论导论(1.20.1)中著名地指出,“人们倾向于接受过去传给他们的不加批判的口头传统,即使这些传统与他们自己的国家有关”。作为一个例子,他引用了雅典流行但错误的观点,即哈莫迪乌斯和阿里斯托盖顿通过暗杀希帕恰斯(1.20.2)将这座城市从波斯时代的暴政中解放出来,并在一个倒叙中详细阐述了他对这一历史误解的反驳,这个倒叙不仅充满了暴政,民主权力和帝国主义也是如此。1所谓的暴政很早就不仅与驱逐暴君联系在一起,而且与雅典民主的基础联系在一起(不方便的干预事件已从雅典人的集体记忆中删除),这绝非巧合。在五世纪末短暂的寡头政治间歇之后,雅典从一批被普遍认为是暴君的新统治者——三十人——手中解放出来,雅典的民主制度得到了复兴。正是在这个五世纪末的历史背景下,雅典民主赋予暴虐者角色特权的基础叙事才被新奉为神圣,2关于暴政的公共话语通常由民众的下意识反应组成,例如
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来源期刊
Trends in Classics
Trends in Classics CLASSICS-
CiteScore
0.40
自引率
50.00%
发文量
9
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