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Demagogues, Power, and Friendship in Classical Athens - Leaders as Friends in Aristophanes, Euripides, and Xenophon (Hardcover)
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Demagogues, Power, and Friendship in Classical Athens - Leaders as Friends in Aristophanes, Euripides, and Xenophon (Hardcover)
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Total price: R2,817
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What makes a demagogue? A much more friendly touch, or more
importantly, a perception of a friendly touch, than has previously
been explored. Demagogues, Power and Friendship in Classical Athens
examines the ways in which a demagogic leadership style based on
personal connection became ingrained in this period, drawing on
close study of several genres of literature of the late 5th and
early-to-mid 4th centuries BCE. Such connection was particularly
effective with lower classes of Athenians, who had been accustomed
to being excluded from politicians' friendship-based approaches to
coalition-building. Comedies of Aristophanes (particularly
Knights), tragedies of Euripides (particularly Iphigenia in Aulis),
and historical biographies of Xenophon (particularly Anabasis and
Cyropaedia) depict demagogues, or characters exhibiting demagogic
characteristics, using a style of outreach to members of neglected
classes that involved provoking feelings of friendship with
individuals in these classes, whether the demagogues and individual
supporters actually interacted closely or not. These leaders
employed techniques, such as propinquity, homophily, and
transitivity, that both contemporary sociologists (and, in some
cases, Aristotle) recognize as effective for such purposes.
Particular attention is paid to discrepancies in Aristophanes'
Knights between how the demagogue Cleon is hyperbolically portrayed
(as a pederastic lover of the Athenian people) and how his language
and actions make him out - as a friend of theirs, as he likely
portrayed himself.
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