面具与符号之间的权威:古希腊王室的地位(公元前4至2世纪)

Paul Cournarie
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引用次数: 0

摘要

希腊国王的身体是什么样的?考虑古代的国王,必须超越恩斯特·坎特罗维茨的图式,在“国王的两个身体”概念之前探索身体。对色诺芬的《塞罗帕迪亚》的分析揭示了这一配置,其中的问题与其说是(无法实现的)皇家超级身体的构造,不如说自然遇到仪式的模糊点,在一个庞大的帝国的背景下,后者对前者绝对必要,但仍然威胁着将其吞没在君主包围自己的奢侈之中。既不透明也不不透明,既是标志又是面具,这种模型被亚历山大大帝进一步打磨。虽然他的形象与同样的选择联系在一起,但他所面临的批评迫使亚历山大在个人和仪式奢华之间做出了战术上的区分。这种分离绝不意味着二元性,而是依赖于不断变化的边界,有时坚持他天生的王室身体,有时坚持由君主的极端掌控重新配置的奢华。希腊化的国王继承了这些问题,并在他们自然存在的象征化和象征化之间交替,在不断的相互作用中抵制稳定。只有罗马的崛起才能终结这种不断构建的王权体系,似乎王权的化身本身是不可思议的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Authority between Mask and Sign: The Status of the Royal Body in Ancient Greece (Fourth to Second Centuries BCE)
What kind of body was the body of a Hellenistic king? To consider kings in antiquity is to necessarily reach back beyond Ernst Kantorowicz's schema and explore the body before the concept of the “king's two bodies.” An analysis of Xenophon's Cyropaedia sheds light on this configuration, in which the problem was not so much the (unachievable) conformation of a royal super-body as the obscure point at which the natural encountered the ceremonial, the latter absolutely essential to the former in the context of a sprawling empire, but nevertheless threatening to engulf it in the luxury with which the sovereign surrounded himself. Neither transparent nor opaque, at once a sign and a mask, this model was further honed by Alexander the Great. While his persona was bound up with the same alternative, the criticisms that he faced obliged Alexander to make a tactical distinction between his person and ceremonial luxury. This separation in no way implied a duality but rather depended on shifting boundaries, sometimes insisting on his naturally royal body, sometimes on the luxury reconfigured by the sovereign's extreme mastery. The Hellenistic kings inherited these questions, and alternated between a symbolization of their natural being and a naturalization of the symbolic in a constant interplay that resisted stabilization. Only the rise of Rome would bring an end to this vision of the royal body in a process of perpetual construction, as though the incarnation of royalty itself was inconceivable.
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