'Illiberal' misanthropy: mîsanthrôpiâ and aneleutheriâ in the rhetorical literature of 4th century BCE Athens

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Titel: 'Illiberal' misanthropy: mîsanthrôpiâ and aneleutheriâ in the rhetorical literature of 4th century BCE Athens
Autoren: Hyttinen Misha
Quelle: Graeco-Latina Brunensia. :89-103
Verlagsinformationen: Masaryk University Press, 2023.
Publikationsjahr: 2023
Schlagwörter: misanthropy, civic duties, rhetorical literature, freedom, aneleutheria, Classical Athens, 16. Peace & justice
Beschreibung: This article examines the interconnectedness of the concepts of classical misanthropy or mîsanthrôpiâ and aneleutheriâ or "illiberality" in a politico-legal context in the rhetorical literature of Classical Athens. My approach offers new insight into the complex nature of mîsanthrôpiâ and Athenian societal values, especially regarding the concept of freedom. Mîsanthrôpiâ is usually understood as the universal hatred of humanity, and it is in this sense that the concept is typically used in ancient Graeco-Roman literature. However, in the rhetorical literature of Classical Athens mîsanthrôpiâ is presented as the quality of a free male citizen who is contemptuous of his fellow citizens and who has failed to properly fulfil his obligations to society and exercise his freedom as a member of the polis. In this setting, mîsanthrôpiâ is closely associated with the multifaceted concept of aneleutheriâ and its moral and civic implications. I argue that this specific rhetorical use of mîsanthrôpiâ was unique to the historical context of Classical Athens and its democratic political system and values and that this explains its disappearance from ancient Greek literature at the end of the Classical period.
Publikationsart: Article
Sprache: English
ISSN: 2336-4424
1803-7402
DOI: 10.5817/glb2023-2-6
Zugangs-URL: https://journals.phil.muni.cz/graeco-latina-brunensia/article/view/37761
https://doi.org/10.5817/glb2023-2-6
Rights: CC BY SA
URL: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/legalcode.cs
Dokumentencode: edsair.doi.dedup.....fd6c7a6e32c54cb8ab8594c20f8aef68
Datenbank: OpenAIRE
Beschreibung
Abstract:This article examines the interconnectedness of the concepts of classical misanthropy or mîsanthrôpiâ and aneleutheriâ or "illiberality" in a politico-legal context in the rhetorical literature of Classical Athens. My approach offers new insight into the complex nature of mîsanthrôpiâ and Athenian societal values, especially regarding the concept of freedom. Mîsanthrôpiâ is usually understood as the universal hatred of humanity, and it is in this sense that the concept is typically used in ancient Graeco-Roman literature. However, in the rhetorical literature of Classical Athens mîsanthrôpiâ is presented as the quality of a free male citizen who is contemptuous of his fellow citizens and who has failed to properly fulfil his obligations to society and exercise his freedom as a member of the polis. In this setting, mîsanthrôpiâ is closely associated with the multifaceted concept of aneleutheriâ and its moral and civic implications. I argue that this specific rhetorical use of mîsanthrôpiâ was unique to the historical context of Classical Athens and its democratic political system and values and that this explains its disappearance from ancient Greek literature at the end of the Classical period.
ISSN:23364424
18037402
DOI:10.5817/glb2023-2-6