Book contents
- Athens, 403 BC
- Reviews
- Classical Scholarship in Translation
- Athens, 403 BC
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Foreword
- Acknowledgments
- Chronology
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Critias and the Oligarchs
- Chapter 2 Thrasybulus and the Democratic Resistance
- Chapter 3 Archinus or the Victory of the ‘Moderates’
- Chapter 4 Socrates and the Voices of Neutrality
- Chapter 5 Lysimache
- Chapter 6 Eutherus and the Precarious Workers
- Chapter 7 Hegeso or the Family Torn Asunder
- Chapter 8 Gerys and the World of the Merchant Agora
- Chapter 9 Nicomachus and the Servants of the City
- Chapter 10 Lysias, a Multifaceted Man
- Conclusion
- Bibliography
- Index
Chapter 4 - Socrates and the Voices of Neutrality
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 February 2025
- Athens, 403 BC
- Reviews
- Classical Scholarship in Translation
- Athens, 403 BC
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Foreword
- Acknowledgments
- Chronology
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Critias and the Oligarchs
- Chapter 2 Thrasybulus and the Democratic Resistance
- Chapter 3 Archinus or the Victory of the ‘Moderates’
- Chapter 4 Socrates and the Voices of Neutrality
- Chapter 5 Lysimache
- Chapter 6 Eutherus and the Precarious Workers
- Chapter 7 Hegeso or the Family Torn Asunder
- Chapter 8 Gerys and the World of the Merchant Agora
- Chapter 9 Nicomachus and the Servants of the City
- Chapter 10 Lysias, a Multifaceted Man
- Conclusion
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
The sources mention many Athenians who settled abroad during the troubles to quietly go about their business, or remained in the city, secluded in their oikos, without joining either camp. To take an interest in these ‘nonaligned’ individuals is to give their place in history back to the many protagonists who resisted the all-encompassing logic of the stasis and the contradictory injunctions that it gave rise to: Choose your side, comrade! But not everything is political in the same way and with the same intensity, either today or in the past: Even in the midst of turmoil, politics does not invest all spheres of existence and all the different layers of society in equal measure. Indeed, orators readily stigmatized the Athenians expelled by the Thirty who, instead of rallying to the democrats in Piraeus, had preferred the comfort of exile; symmetrically, many Athenians who remained in the city tried to demonstrate that they had not participated in any way in the exactions of the oligarchy. Socrates represents in this respect a case that is both common and exceptional: common, in that he was far from being the only one not to take sides during the civil war; exceptional, in that he declared this neutrality loud and clear, even if it meant arousing suspicion on both sides. A final question remains: Did all these ‘neutral individuals’ form a chorus in their own right? What links can be established between people who have remained outside the field of political confrontation – strangers to the ‘bond of division,’ to paraphrase Nicole Loraux? To put it another way: Is it possible to ‘make community’ out of abstention, even if it is an active choice?
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- Athens, 403 BCA Democracy in Crisis?, pp. 138 - 165Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2025