Father-son conflict was for the Athenians a topic of widespread
interest that touched the core of both family and political life,
particularly during times of social upheaval. In this vivid account
of the intermingling of politics and the private sphere in
classical Athens, Barry Strauss explores the tensions experienced
by a society that cherished both youthful independence and paternal
authority. He examines father-son relations within the Athenian
family and the way these relations were represented in a wide
variety of political and literary texts. His inquiry reveals that
representations of patricide, father beating, and son murdering did
not necessarily coincide with actual instances but rather served as
metaphors for intergenerational tensions fueled by democracy, the
sophists, and the Peloponnesian War.
Strauss points out that major Athenian accounts of father-son
conflict--such as the myth of the Athenian national hero, Theseus,
and the plays of Euripides and Aristophanes--were either produced
or enthusiastically revived during the war. He traces the relation
between the use of familial metaphors in these accounts and
fluctuations in Athenian wartime ideology: as the fortunes of
Athens shifted, citizens went from confidence in their elder
statesman Pericles to enthusiasm over a new generation of young
politicians led by Pericles' ward Alcibiades, and back to an
insistence on what Athenians called the "paternal" rule of older
leaders. In emphasizing the blurring of boundaries between family
and state, or private and public, in Athens, Strauss encourages us
to reflect anew on the distinction between these concepts and on
the difficulties of putting that distinction into practice
today.
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