<span>Socrates, son of Sophroniscus, of Alopece is arguably the most richly and diversely commemorated - and appropriated - of all ancient thinkers. Already in Antiquity, vigorous controversy over his significance and value ensured a wide range of conflicting representations. He then became availabl
Socrates in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries (Publications of the Centre for Hellenic Studies, King's College London)
β Scribed by Michael Trapp (editor)
- Publisher
- Routledge
- Year
- 2007
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 258
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Socrates, son of Sophroniscus, of Alopece is arguably the most richly and diversely commemorated - and appropriated - of all ancient thinkers. Already in Antiquity, vigorous controversy over his significance and value ensured a wide range of conflicting representations. He then became available to the medieval, renaissance and modern worlds in a provocative variety of roles: as paradigmatic philosopher and representative (for good or ill) of ancient philosophical culture in general; as practitioner of a distinctive philosophical method, and a distinctive philosophical lifestyle; as the ostensible originator of startling doctrines about politics and sex; as martyr (the victim of the most extreme of all miscarriages of justice); as possessor of an extraordinary, and extraordinarily significant physical appearance; and as the archetype of the hen-pecked intellectual. To this day, he continues to be the most readily recognized of ancient philosophers, as much in popular as in academic culture. This volume, along with its companion, Socrates from Antiquity to the Enlightenment, aims to do full justice to the source material (philosophical, literary, artistic, political), and to the range of interpretative issues it raises. It opens with an Introduction summarizing the reception of Socrates up to 1800, and describing scholarly study since then. This is followed by sections on the hugely influential Socrateses of Hegel, Kirkegaard and Nietzsche; representations of Socrates (particularly his erotic teaching) principally inspired by Plato's Symposium; and political manipulations of Socratic material, especially in the 20th century. A distinctive feature is the inclusion of Cold War Socrateses, both capitalist and communist.
β¦ Table of Contents
Cover
Half Title
Title
Copyright
Contents
Foreword
Contributors
List of figures
Introduction: the nineteenth- and twentieth-century Socrates
1. Socrates in Hegel
2. A simple wise man of ancient times: Kierkegaard on Socrates
3. Nietzsche's Socrateases
4. Later views of the Socrates of Plato's Symposium
5. Anselm Feuerbach's Das Gastmahl des Platon
6. From amor Socraticus to Socrates amoris: Socrates and the formation of a sexual identity in late Victorian Britain
7. The thorn of Sokrates: Georg Kaiser's Alkibiades Saved and Bertolt Brecht's Sokrates Wounded
8. 'Socrates knew . . .' affect (Besetzung) in Britten's Death in Venice
9. Effacing Socratic irony: philosophy and technΓͺ in John Stuart Mill's translation of the Protagoras
10. Totalitarian Socrates
11. 'Gadfly in God's Own Country': Socrates in twentieth-century America
General bibliography
Index
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