The City and the Stage: Performance, Genre, and Gender in Plato's Laws

The City and the Stage: Performance, Genre, and Gender in Plato's Laws

by Marcus Folch
The City and the Stage: Performance, Genre, and Gender in Plato's Laws

The City and the Stage: Performance, Genre, and Gender in Plato's Laws

by Marcus Folch

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Overview

What role did poetry, music, song, and dance play in the social and political life of the ancient Greek city? How did philosophy respond to, position itself against, and articulate its own ambitions in relation to the poetic tradition? How did ancient philosophers theorize and envision alternatives to fourth-century Athenian democracy? The City and the Stage poses such questions in a study of the Laws, Plato's last, longest, and unfinished philosophical dialogue. Reading the Laws in its literary, historical, and philosophical contexts, this book offers a new interpretation of Plato's final dialogue with the Greek poetic tradition and an exploration of the dialectic between philosophy and mimetic art. Although Plato is often thought hostile to poetry and famously banishes mimetic art from the ideal city of the Republic, The City and the Stage shows that in his final work Plato made a striking about-face, proposing to rehabilitate Athenian performance culture and envisaging a city, Magnesia, in which poetry, music, song, and dance are instrumental in the cultivation of philosophical virtues. Plato's views of the performative properties of music, dance, and poetic language, and the psychological underpinnings of aesthetic experience receive systematic treatment in this book for the first time. The social role of literary criticism, the power of genres to influence a society and lead to specific kinds of constitutions, performance as a mechanism of gender construction, and the position of women in ancient Greek performance culture are central themes throughout this study. A wide-ranging examination of ancient Greek philosophy and fourth-century intellectual culture, The City and the Stage will be of significance to anyone interested in ancient Greek literature, performance, and Platonic philosophy in its historical contexts.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780190606480
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 12/01/2015
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Marcus Folch is Associate Professor of Classics at Columbia University. His published work includes studies of ancient Greek literature, philosophy, and literary criticism, as well as classical reception in the 20th century.

Table of Contents

Introduction: Performance and the Second-Best City Abstract i 1 Introduction i 2 An Ancient Quarrel Revisited xiii 3 The Laws, Its City, Its Scope xxxiii 4 Paradigmatism and the 'Second-Best' Politeia xlv 5 The Correct Method (orthê methodos) of Cultural Criticism lii 6 Conclusions lx Notes lxiv Chapter 1. Marionettes of the Soul: Performance and the Psychology of Mousikê in Plato's Laws Abstract 1 1.1 Introduction 2 1.2 Theoretical Orientations: Performance, Performativity, Political Dissent 14 1.3 Of Puppets and Passions: The Moral Psychology of Performance in Plato's Laws 34 1.4 Virtue, Education, Aesthetic Response: A Model of Performativity 57 1.5 Inscription and the Making of a Philosophical Performance Culture 74 1.6 Conclusions 94 Notes 95 Chapter 2. The Chorus and the Critic: Literary Criticism, Theatrocracy, and the Performance of Philosophy Abstract 104 2.1 Introduction 105 2.2 Critical Errors: Genre, Theatrocracy, and the Unideal City 111 2.3 Setting the Stage: Pleasure, Judgment, and the Performance of Philosophy 132 2.4 Beyond the Choral Muse: The Chorus of Dionysus and the Metaphysics of Literary Criticism 140 2.5 Conclusions 161 Notes 162 Chapter 3. Laws' Genres: Hymns, Encomia, and the Remaking of Lament Abstract 177 3.1 Th Introduction: 178 3.2 The Laws' Genres: Hymns, Encomia, and the Politics of Euphêmia 185 3.3 The Laws in Praise and Blame 198 3.4 Funerary Regained 207 3.5 Conclusions 221 Notes 226 Chapter 4. Unideal Genres and the Ideal City: Comedy, Tragedy, and the Limits of the City Dancing Abstract 232 4.1 Introduction 233 4.2 Comedy, Threnody, and the Performance of Alterity 236 4.3 From Antithesis to Identity: Comedic and Iambic Invective 253 4.4 Plato's Tragic Muse 257 4.5 Beyond the Politics of Performance: ta bakkheia and the Genres of Ecstasy 271 4.6 Conclusions 277 Notes 279 Chapter 5. Women's Statuses in Plato's Laws: Nature, Gender, Law, and the Performance of Citizenship Abstract 288 5.1 Introduction 289 5.2 'Natural' Heterosexuality 295 5.3 Transgendered Virtues and the Social Contract 310 5.4 Natural Correction: Feasting, Warfare, Schooling, and the 'Trope of Life' (tropos tou biou) 315 5.5 Unnatural Limitations: The Political Lives of Women 333 5.6 Conclusions 346 Notes 348 Chapter 6. Engendering Harmonies: Women's Songs in Plato's Laws Abstract 357 6.1 Introduction 358 6.2 Veils of Silence: Women, Theater, and Performance in Athens and Magnesia 361 6.3 Performance, Performativity, and the Making of Citizen Women 372 6.4 'Cultic Citizenship' Revisited: Lament and the Female Voice 390 6.5 Conclusions 401 Notes 406 Epilogue. Plato's Last Long: A Postlude on Law and the Preludes 406 Bibliography 427
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