War, Peace, and Alliance in Demosthenes' Athens
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:23rd Dec '21
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
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This book explores the thinking and feelings, often surprisingly modern, that determined Athenian foreign policy decisions in the fourth century BC.
This book examines the oratorical appeals deployed in assembly speeches to understand the wide range of thinking and feeling that determined Athenian foreign policy decisions. It draws on theories of militarism, international relations, games, gender, and metaphor to show how even seemingly irrational appeals made sense in their context.Every Athenian alliance, every declaration of war, and every peace treaty was instituted by a decision of the assembly, where citizens voted after listening to speeches that presented varied and often opposing arguments about the best course of action. The fifteen preserved assembly speeches of the mid-fourth century BC thus provide an unparalleled body of evidence for the way that Athenians thought and felt about interstate relations: to understand this body of oratory is to understand how the Athenians of that period made decisions about war and peace. This book provides a comprehensive treatment of this subject. It deploys insights from a range of fields, from anthropology to international relations theory, in order not only to describe Athenian thinking, but also to explain it. Athenian thinking turns out to have been complex, sophisticated, and surprisingly familiar both in its virtues and its flaws.
ISBN: 9781009159432
Dimensions: 227mm x 152mm x 18mm
Weight: 490g
331 pages