The Spartan Drama of Platos Laws
(Paperback)
Available Formats
Publishing Details
Full Title:
The Spartan Drama of Platos Laws
Publisher:
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Classifications
Readership:
Professional and Scholarly
Physical Properties
Dimensions:
Width 154mm, Height 230mm, Spine 16mm
Description
Friedland presents the Laws, Plato's longest dialogue, as a drama that must be interpreted with close and sustained attention to each of its three characters. He argues that Megillos, seen by most commentators as the most obtuse character in the dialogue, is in fact a man of few words but of surprising capacity for reflection. This capacity, and the crisis to which it brings him, is key to understanding the Laws' exploration of human nature, permanently drawn both to what is beyond and beneath it. The political project outlined in the dialogue, with its almost programmatic focus on the mundane, is a genuinely philosophical opportunity to consider the relationship between competing demands for human beings - between divine and animal nature, and also including the always tense but necessary antagonisms and affinities between politics and human sexuality.
Reviews
Eli Friedland's original and thought-provoking work, "The Spartan Drama of Plato's Laws", helps express the extraordinary subtlety and cogency that run through Plato's longest dialogue.
* The Review of Politics *
The Spartan Drama of Platos Laws is a much needed philosophical provocation. At once dramaturgical, philological, and historical, Friedlands careful and incisive reading of Platos Laws uncovers a play of characters whose participation in, and refusal of, their own philosophical self-shaping is meant to reorient politics theirs and ours to the ethical and psychological requirements of genuine political virtue. Illuminating, critical, and deeply engaging, The Spartan Drama is an important contribution to Plato scholarship. -- Nina Valiquette Moreau, University of Chicago
This brilliant and ground-breaking book is the first to show why understanding the differences between the characters of Kleinias and Megillus is crucial for understanding the most important teachings of Platos Laws concerning wealth, war, righteous indignation, punishment, and responsibility. Bristling with insights on every page, it sets a new standard for what a dramatic reading of a Platonic dialogue can achieve. Every scholar of Platos Laws should have this book in their collection. -- Christina Tarnopolsky, Yale-NUS College
With acute care, incisive originality, and must-read endnotes, Eli Friedland shines brilliant light on the complex dialogic engagement across the characters of Platos Laws. Bringing to appearance crucial differences between the Cretan Kleinias and the Spartan Megillos (the Laws' unsung hero, Friedland argues) on war, wealth, law, and, especially, erotic desire, The Spartan Drama of Platos Laws elaborates the profound ethical, political, and philosophical stakes of these differences for living a responsible, which is to say, a human life. -- Jill Frank, Cornell University
We are always in need of reminders about what is at stake in reading Platos dialogues. By means of a fresh and bracing interpretation of the Laws, Friedland calls us to account as readers, as friends to others and ourselves, and for the twinned responsibilities of citizenship and philosophy. The Spartan Drama of Platos Laws is a truly philosophical engagement with this indispensable text. -- Matthew Linck, St. Johns College, Annapolis
Author Bio
Eli Friedland is independent scholar.