“Cyrus appeared both great and good”

Carol Atack · 2018

In this chapter, Atack argues that Xenophon’s depiction of the performance of kingship by Cyrus (<italicCyropaedia</italic), Agesilaus (<italicHellenica, Agesilaus</italic), and other kings contains an evaluative model that explores alternative techniques a ruler can use to persuade others to be…

Type:
Book
Author:
Carol Atack
Published:
2018
Publisher:
Oxford University Press

In this chapter, Atack argues that Xenophon’s depiction of the performance of kingship by Cyrus (<italic>Cyropaedia</italic>), Agesilaus (<italic>Hellenica, Agesilaus</italic>), and other kings contains an evaluative model that explores alternative techniques a ruler can use to persuade others to be ruled. By deploying frameworks of performativity and spectacle derived from Judith Butler and Guy Debord respectively, this chapter analyses these narratives of kingship and connects them to other Greek political and ethical concerns about the role of the outstanding individual within society, linking Xenophon more closely to both Plato and Aristotle as a political and ethical theorist. Yet Xenophon’s orientation toward performativity also pulls him in the direction of analysts of status and structure. In its performative aspects Xenophon’s kingship begins to look like gender, equally established through performance and with a troubled relationship to essence.

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What is "“Cyrus appeared both great and good”" about?
In this chapter, Atack argues that Xenophon’s depiction of the performance of kingship by Cyrus (<italicCyropaedia</italic), Agesilaus (<italicHellenica, Agesilaus</italic), and other kings contains an evaluative model that explores alternative techniques a ruler can use to persuade others to be…
Who wrote "“Cyrus appeared both great and good”"?
Carol Atack