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Athenian Legacies
A01=Josiah Ober
Aeschylus
Apology (Plato)
Aristotle
Athenian Democracy
Author_Josiah Ober
Basileus
Callicles
Category=JHB
Category=JPA
Citizenship
Civil disobedience
Classical Athens
Cleisthenes of Sicyon
Communitarianism
Cosmopolitanism
Critias
Cultural history
Deliberation
Demagogue
Democracy
Demosthenes
Epigram
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eq_society-politics
Explanation
Freedom of speech
Governance
Hoi polloi
Horoi
Hubris
Iconography
Ideal type
Ideology
Ignorantia juris non excusat
Imperialism
Impiety
Impossibility
Institution
Isocrates
Liberalism
Lustration
Meletus
Metic
Moral authority
Nation state
Natural slavery
Negative liberty
Obedience (human behavior)
Oligarchy
Original position
Philosopher
Plato
Political culture
Political philosophy
Politics
Positivism
Precedent
Prosecutor
Pseudohistory
Public morality
Public sphere
Republic (Plato)
Scientism
Slavery
Special rights
Subversion
Superiority (short story)
Sycophant
Symbolic power
The Philosopher
Thirty Tyrants
Thucydides
Trial of Socrates
Tyrannicide
Tyrant
Product details
- ISBN 9780691133942
- Weight: 425g
- Dimensions: 152 x 235mm
- Publication Date: 16 Sep 2007
- Publisher: Princeton University Press
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Paperback
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How do communities survive catastrophe? Using classical Athens as its case study, this book argues that if a democratic community is to survive over time, its people must choose to go on together. That choice often entails hardship and hard bargains. In good times, going on together presents few difficulties. But in the face of loss, disruption, and civil war, it requires tragic sacrifices and agonizing compromises. Athenian Legacies demonstrates with flair and verve how the people of one influential political community rebuilt their democratic government, rewove their social fabric, and, through thick and thin, went on together. The book's essays address amnesty, civic education, and institutional innovation in early Athens, a city that built and lost an empire while experiencing plague, war, economic trauma, and civil conflict. As Ober vividly demonstrates, Athenians became adept at collective survival. They conjoined a cultural commitment to government by the people with new institutions that captured the social and technical knowledge of a diverse population to recover from revolution, foreign occupation, and the ravages of war.
Ober provides insight into notorious instances of Athenian injustice, explaining why slaves, women, and foreign residents willingly risked their lives to support a regime in which they were systematically mistreated. He answers the question of why Socrates never left a city he said was badly governed. At a time when social scientists debate the cultural grounding necessary to foster democracy, Athenian Legacies advances new arguments about the role of diversity and the relevance of shared understanding of the past in creating democracies that flourish when the going gets rough.
Josiah Ober is Constantine Mitsotakis Professor of Political Science and Classics at Stanford. His books include "Mass and Elite in Democratic Athens, The Athenian Revolution, Political Dissent in Democratic Athens", and "A Company of Citizens", coauthored with Brook Manville.
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