Book Cover
E-book
Author Joho, Tobias, author.

Title Style and necessity in Thucydides / Tobias Joho
Edition First edition
Published Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2022
©2022

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Description 1 online resource (368 pages) : illustrations (color)
Summary Ancient literary critics were struck by what they described as Thucydides' 'nominal style', a term that refers to Thucydides' fondness for abstract nominal phrases. As this book shows, Thucydides frequently uses theses phrases instead of approximately synonymous verbal and personal constructions. These stylistic choices tend to de-emphasize human agency: people find themselves in a passive role, exposed to incidents happening to them rather than being actively in charge of events. Thus, the analysis of the abstract style raises the question of necessity in Thucydides. On numerous occasions, Thucydides and his speakers use impersonal and passive language to stress the subjection of human beings to transpersonal forces that manifest themselves in collective passions and an inherent dynamic of events. These factors are constitutive of the human condition and become a substitute for the notion of divine fatalism prevalent in earlier Greek thought. Yet Thucydidean necessity is not absolute. It stands in the tradition of a type of fatalism that one finds in Homer and Herodotus. In these authors, the gods or fate tend to settle the outcome of the most significant events, but they leave leeway for the specific way in which these pivotal events come to pass. Thus, the Greeks endorsed a malleable variant of necessity, so that considerable scope for human choice persists within the framework fixed by necessity. Pericles turns out to be Thucydides' prime example of an individual who uses the leeway left by necessity for prudent interventions into the course of events
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Description based on online resource; title from home page (Oxford Academic, viewed on October 9, 2023)
Subject Thucydides.
Thucydides. History of the Peloponnesian War.
SUBJECT Thucydides fast
History of the Peloponnesian War (Thucydides) fast
Subject History, Ancient.
Grammar, Comparative and general -- Nominals.
Necessity (Philosophy)
History, Ancient
Literature: history & criticism.
Literature.
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9780191850059
0191850055