Ers, Song, and Philosophy in Plato: Towards a Synthesis of a Cultural Ideal
By (Author) Chara Kokkiou
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Lexington Books
13th November 2020
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Literary studies: ancient, classical and medieval
Pragmatism
184
Hardback
188
Width 161mm, Height 229mm, Spine 21mm
463g
Ers, Song and Philosophy in Plato raises critical issues regarding conceptions of how song and philosophy in erotic contexts are treated by Plato in his attempt to rewrite, to some degree, the cultural tradition. A question that seems to be repeatedly raised throughout the Platonic dialogues is why it is precisely song that needs to be put aside before we can start doing philosophy as a more serious and perfect kind of song. Extensive discussion of this key thematic cluster with an emphasis on the concept of beauty, which is harmoniously interwoven with ers and song, has been absent. Chara Kokkiou argues that there is a constant interplay among erotic, musical-poetic and spatial motifs and the way those are incorporated into the very essence of philosophical dialectic is indicative of the unique nature of Platos philosophy. Her analysis centers on paiderastic and mousikos ers, which, if thoroughly purified, contribute significantly to the composition of Socrates portrait as mousikos philosophos. The Socratic philosophical logos displays reformed erotic and song-authorized patterns, such as the power to inspire and heal. Through close reading of certain Platonic passages and detailed attention to choral and mythical patterns, such as those included in the eschatological myths of Republic and Phaedo, and to the descriptions of locus amoenus in Phaedrus and Laws, she demonstrates that Plato through his painstakingly purged philosophical model delineates the route towards
This book would nurture the research on the phenomenology of the embodied and situated soul, for example about emotions. The book is an excellent starting point for such an investigation.
-- "International Journal of Platonic Tradition"Chara Kokkiou is an instructor at Tulane University.