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Athenian beliefs about revenge: problems and methods*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 February 2013
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In a short article published in The Classical Quarterly, Professor W.V. Harris questioned some of the opinions that I have put forward concerning revenge in Athenian society. His reservations presupposed certain methodological premises that he believes the researcher should adopt when dealing with ancient sources that reveal sentiments and emotions. In expressing the aforementioned opinions I criticised these premises by implication, but without dealing directly with the methodological problems surrounding the issue. Professor Harris's article has now provided me with an excellent opportunity to confront these problems explicitly and to examine how two different methods of analysis have given rise to diametrically opposed opinions concerning revenge in Athenian society. Revenge is a common human sentiment that is expressed in the individual's outward behaviour, influences social behaviour and has implications for society as a whole. The question of whether it was controlled and repressed or fostered and stimulated in classical Athens is of no trifling importance.
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References
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15 This is a little surprising, since I have dealt extensively with passages from, for example, Thucydides, Plato's Crito and Protagoras and Aeschylus' Choephoroi.
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25 I borrow the phrase from Harold Perkins' review of Gay's, PeterThe cultivation of hatred (London, 1993)Google Scholar, a study of the interplay between the psychological roots of violence, aggression and historical change during the Victorian period.
26 Lionel Pearson, for instance, proceeding on the assumption that there is one, draws inferences about popular ethics (in my view totally mistaken ones) from Aeschylean tragedy (Popular ethics in ancient Greece (Stanford, 1962)Google Scholar, esp. ch. 4: ‘Justice and revenge: the tragedies of Aeschylus’).
27 Law, violence (n. 11 above) 125.
28 I explore this suggestion in ‘How violent …?’ (n. 2 above).
29 This is a point that he makes explicitly: ‘In the name of the gods, Athenians, I ask you to reflect and calculate in your minds how much more reason I had to be angry when I suffered so at the hands of Meidias, than Euaeon when he killed Boeotus … And, Athenians, I consider that I was prudent, or rather happily inspired, when I submitted at the time and was not impelled to any irremediable action’ (Dem. 21.73–4).
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36 The language of morals (Oxford, 1978; ed. 1 1952), 1Google ScholarPubMed, his italics.
37 Thuc. 3.81. trans. Rex Warner.
38 A point that, contrary to Harris's imputations, I have never sought to deny. Cf. Herman, , ‘How violent…’ (n. 2 above) 111ffGoogle Scholar; ‘Honour, revenge …’ (n. 2 above) 56 n. 28.
39 Thuc. 2.37, trans. Rex Warner.
40 Cf. Herman, ‘How violent …?’ (n. 2 above).
41 Plato, , Seventh letter, 325b5Google Scholar; Aeschin. 3.208, to be read with Dorjahn, A.P., Political forgiveness in old Athens (Evanston, 1946)Google Scholar.
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43 Cf. Herman, ‘Honour, revenge …’ (n. 2 above), and G. Vlastos, ‘Socrates' rejection of retaliation’ (n. 23 above). Vlastos offers a marvellous description of the idea itself, but, accepting the traditional interpretation of revenge in Athenian society, is at a loss to account for its origins.
44 A good example of the latter type is furnished by Cohen's Law, violence and community in classical Athens (n. 12 above). Fully embracing the first three of the assumptions criticised in this article, and employing extremely loose criteria, Cohen proceeds to compare Athenian society with societies such as those of contemporary Anglo-America, ancient Rome, Renaissance Italy, Turkey, Japan, France, Corsica, the Tonga and the Tallensi. He reaches the conclusion that I outlined on p. 9 above. Cf. my review in Gnomon (n. 2 above).
45 This point has been brought out by Gehrke, , ‘Die Griechen und die Rache’ (n. 6 above) 129ffGoogle Scholar.
46 I should perhaps stress that to the best of my knowledge no modern scholar has ever dreamt of translating the famous passage in [Arist.], Ath. pol. 9.1 as ‘permission for anyone who wished to take revenge on behalf of the injured party’; it is generally translated as ‘permission for anyone who wished to secure punishment on behalf of the injured party’.
47 I elaborate upon this point in ‘How violent…’, and in my review of Cohen, p. 8 (both n. 2 above).
48 I resent Harris's imputation that I left the reader ‘wondering which societies are comparable’. I clearly defined and provided concrete examples of the sorts of society that I thought comparable. Cf., for instance, Herman, ‘How violent…’, (n. 2 above) 102 esp. n. 3.
49 Cf. Herman, ‘Reciprocity, altruism …’ (n. 2 above).
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