Description
Book SynopsisThis book shows how the discussion of Platos'' Republic is a comic mimetic cure for civic and psychic delusion. Plato creates such pharmaka, or noble lies, for reasons enunciated by Socrates within the discussion, but this indicates Plato must think his readers are in the position of needing the catharses such fictions produce. Socrates'' interlocutors must be like us. Since cities are like souls, and souls come to be as they are through mimesis of desires, dreams, actions and thought patterns in the city, we should expect that political theorizing often suffers from madness as well. It does. Gene Fendt shows how contemporary political (and psychological) theory still suffers from the same delusion Socrates'' interlocutors reveal in their discussion: a dream of autarchia called possessive individualism. Plato has good reason to think that only a mimetic, rather than a rational and philosophical, cure can work. Against many standard readings, Comic Cure for Delusional Democracy shows th
Trade ReviewGene Fendt's book is a rereading and rethinking of the relation between our passions and our reason in the light of poetic nature of Plato's Republic. It is a book that searches for and sees the unity of the great Platonic work along with the inner relations that exist between city and soul. The 'missing' city of Fendt's argument is, perhaps, indicated in his introductory dedication: Ad majoren civitatis dei gloriam, with its overtones of both Augustine and Ignatius. -- James V. Schall, S.J., Georgetown University
Fendt offers a fresh reading of the Republic that allows Plato to speak in his own terms—mimetic, dramatic, imagistic, ironic, comedic, and above all therapeutic—rather than imposing an alien, “analytic” problematic on the text. The book unites philosophical insights and verbal sparklers in a manner true to the spirit of Plato himself. -- Eric Perl, Loyola Marymount University
In this compellingly readable new study, Gene Fendt shows that Plato is well aware that we cannot, as human beings, ever leave the psychic or political cave, nor ever have done with rhetorical persuasive power and the sway of poetic mimesis. Rather, if our cities and souls are to be cured, they must be touched in their force and desire by the wind of the intellect. Fendt's compelling and decisive argument has powerful implications for the re-reading of our western legacy. -- Catherine Pickstock, University of Cambridge
Many pages of the book are impressive in showing the familiarity of many long-lasting conversations about the Republic. * Interpretation *
Table of ContentsIntroduction: Plato’s Mimetic Art: The Power of the Mimetic, the Complexity of Plato’s Art Chapter One: The Madman at the Door: Delusion and Mimetic Art in Republic and Modernity Chapter Two: Psyche’s Pharmacy Chapter Three: Enlarging Homer: An Aristophanic Sex Comedy Chapter Four: Out of the Cave: The divided line as pharmaceutical outline of the Republic Interlude: Of analogy, tri-partition, and logical and poetic form Chapter Five: From Mathematics to Social Science: The Six Geometries of Regime in Republic Chapter Six: Polymorphous Perversity: Desires, delusions and catharses of Republic’s characters Coda and Prelude: The Liturgical Catharsis of Republic