What’s Wrong with Democracy? The Peculiar Power of Kratos
In this paper, I reconstruct the notion of kratos as a unique and distinguishable mode of political power. My claim will be that kratos encapsulates a specific problem for democracy, in both ancient and modern contexts. Using examples from 5th- and 4th- century Attic tragedy, Old Comedy, and forensi...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Open research Europe 2021-01, Vol.1, p.56-56 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | In this paper, I reconstruct the notion of
kratos
as a unique and distinguishable mode of political power. My claim will be that
kratos
encapsulates a specific problem for democracy, in both ancient and modern contexts. Using examples from 5th- and 4th- century Attic tragedy, Old Comedy, and forensic oratory, I show how
kratos
was used in Athenian cultural and political discourse to convey the
irrefutability
of a claim, the recognition of
prevailing
over another, and the sense of
having the last word
, all of which makes kratic power dependent upon its continued demonstrability. Although the agency of the dēmos is now largely mediated through representative mechanisms, the peculiarly kratic drive towards ‘winning,’ with all its inherent instability and vacuity, remains indispensable for democratic legitimacy. In focusing critical attention on
kratos
and the pathology of winning, I hope to shift discussion from what divides ‘elites’ from the ‘masses,’ to a problem shared in common. |
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ISSN: | 2732-5121 2732-5121 |
DOI: | 10.12688/openreseurope.13726.2 |