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Consuming Narratives: The Politics of Cannibalism on Mt. Lykaion
Author(s) -
Esther Eidinow
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
classica et mediaevalia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2596-7932
pISSN - 0106-5815
DOI - 10.7146/classicaetmediaevalia.v67i0.111768
Subject(s) - analogy , mythology , politics , cannibalism , narrative , context (archaeology) , literature , the republic , philosophy , epistemology , history , art , law , political science , archaeology , biology , larva , botany
This article examines a Classical reference to werewolves, a passing analogy made by Plato in the Republic, in his description of the development of a tyrant. In gen- eral, scholars of myth/ritual have largely downplayed or taken for granted the specific Platonic context; while philosophers have tended to overlook both Lyka i an cannibalism, and the intricacies of political alliances in the early fourth century BC. This paper brings together three areas of investigation: philosophy, religion and political history, situating the myth/ritual complex of Lykaon/Mt. Lykaion within the framework of (1) Plato’s Republic, where this myth/ritual is introduced analogically, and (2) fourth-century Peloponnesian politics, to which, it is argued, the Platonic werewolf analogy may be alluding, either in general or specific terms.

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