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'Freedom is the sure possession...': modern receptions of Pericles' funeral oration

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posted on 2025-08-02, 11:32 authored by N Morley
Pericles’ funeral oration has played a significant public role, especially in Anglophone countries, over the last century. Renaissance humanists had valued it simply as a masterful piece of oratory, to be studied for its literary qualities. In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, it was seen primarily as a source of historical information about Athenian culture, with no present significance. The great change came in the early nineteenth century, when radical and liberal thinkers in Britain, for whom democracy was no longer a threat but a promise, focussed increasingly on the contents of the speech. Cultural achievement was, they argued, intimately bound up with the participation of the people in public life. For them, the proof was in Pericles’ praise of Athens and its institutions. Ancient and modern democracy were now elided, and the words of this funeral speech were thus made available for politicians seeking to celebrate their own societies, from the United States of America to the European Union. These readers of the funeral oration as a celebration of democracy almost entirely ignored the original context of the speech. Developments in modern warfare as well as the rise of the mass citizen army changed this.

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© 2024 Cambridge University Press

Notes

This is the final version. Available from Cambridge University Press via the DOI in this record

Pagination

414-435

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Editors

Pritchard, D

Place published

Cambridge

Version

  • Version of Record

Language

en

FCD date

2024-02-02T15:47:07Z

FOA date

2024-07-10T23:00:00Z

Citation

In: The Athenian Funeral Oration: After Nicole Loraux, edited by David M. Pritchard. pp. 414-435

Department

  • Classics, Ancient History, Religion and Theology

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