Athenian Revolution

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A01=Josiah Ober
Ancient Greece
Archaic Greece
Aristocracy
Aristotle
Athenian Democracy
Author_Josiah Ober
Cambridge University Press
Category=JPA
Category=JPHV
Category=NHC
Category=NHD
Citizenship
Classical antiquity
Classical Athens
Criticism
Democracy
Demosthenes
Direct democracy
Ekklesia (think tank)
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Explanation
False consciousness
Foreign policy
Forms of government
Government
Greek democracy
Hegemony
Herodotus
Historiography
Hoi polloi
Hoplite
Ideology
Indictment
Institution
Intellectual history
Isagoras
Isocrates
J. L. Austin
Liberalism
Literature
Narrative
Oligarchy
Philosopher
Politeia
Political Affairs (magazine)
Political culture
Political history
Political organization
Political philosophy
Political science
Political system
Politician
Politics
Positivism
Postmodernism
Public speaking
Public sphere
Radical democracy
Regime
Republic (Plato)
Rhetoric
Slavery
Social class
Social inequality
Social reality
Social structure
Sovereignty
State (polity)
Superiority (short story)
Tax
Theory
Thucydides
Value (ethics)
Wealth
Westphalian sovereignty
Writing

Product details

  • ISBN 9780691001906
  • Weight: 340g
  • Dimensions: 197 x 254mm
  • Publication Date: 03 Jan 1999
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Where did "democracy" come from, and what was its original form and meaning? Here Josiah Ober shows that this "power of the people" crystallized in a revolutionary uprising by the ordinary citizens of Athens in 508-507 B.C. He then examines the consequences of the development of direct democracy for upper-and lower-class citizens, for dissident Athenian intellectuals, and for those who were denied citizenship under the new regime (women, slaves, resident foreigners), as well as for the general development of Greek history. When the citizens suddenly took power into their own hands, they changed the cultural and social landscape of Greece, thereby helping to inaugurate the Classical Era. Democracy led to fundamental adjustments in the basic structures of Athenian society, altered the forms and direction of political thinking, and sparked a series of dramatic reorientations in international relations. It quickly made Athens into the most powerful Greek city-state, but it also fatally undermined the traditional Greek rules of warfare. It stimulated the development of the Western tradition of political theorizing and encouraged a new conception of justice that has striking parallels to contemporary theories of rights. But Athenians never embraced the notions of inherency and inalienability that have placed the concept of rights at the center of modern political thought. Thus the play of power that constituted life in democratic Athens is revealed as at once strangely familiar and desperately foreign, and the values sustaining the Athenian political community as simultaneously admirable and terrifying.
Josiah Ober is the David Magie Professor of Ancient History in the Classics Department of Princeton University. He is the author of Political Dissent in Democratic Athens: Intellectual Critics of Popular Rule, Mass and Elite in Democratic Athens: Rhetoric, Ideology, and the Power of the People and Demokratia: A Conversation on Democracies, Ancient and Modern (all from Princeton).