Authorship is a central issue in Plato’s Menexenus. The work consists mainly of a long rhetorical speech, which Socrates claims to have learnt from Aspasia, who in turn composed it by using parts of an oration previously delivered by Pericles. However, there are obvious anachronisms in the speech, since events which took place after Socrates’ death are mentioned. While Plato hides his own identity as an author behind the voices of the characters, in the dialogue Socrates himself is elusive and denies that he is the author of the speech. On the other hand, the comparison with Thucydides is possible, who had integrated the Pericles’ famous funeral speech into his writing on the Peloponnesian war. In addition to that, the use of the rhetorical tradition must be considered. What is the author’s role in using the pre-existing topoi constantly repeated by orators in the civic context? The essay aims to demonstrate that in the Menexenus the doubts about the authorship are deliberately emphasized by Plato. Thus, the reader is induced to question the text and grasp the author’s thought by deeply investigating the overall literary construction of the dialogue.
Una lode esemplare da non divulgare: anacronismi e stratificazione della voce autoriale nel Menesseno di Platone / Brunello, Claudia. - In: SEMINARI ROMANI DI CULTURA GRECA. - ISSN 1129-5953. - 11, 2022(2023), pp. 177-201.
Una lode esemplare da non divulgare: anacronismi e stratificazione della voce autoriale nel Menesseno di Platone
Claudia Brunello
2023
Abstract
Authorship is a central issue in Plato’s Menexenus. The work consists mainly of a long rhetorical speech, which Socrates claims to have learnt from Aspasia, who in turn composed it by using parts of an oration previously delivered by Pericles. However, there are obvious anachronisms in the speech, since events which took place after Socrates’ death are mentioned. While Plato hides his own identity as an author behind the voices of the characters, in the dialogue Socrates himself is elusive and denies that he is the author of the speech. On the other hand, the comparison with Thucydides is possible, who had integrated the Pericles’ famous funeral speech into his writing on the Peloponnesian war. In addition to that, the use of the rhetorical tradition must be considered. What is the author’s role in using the pre-existing topoi constantly repeated by orators in the civic context? The essay aims to demonstrate that in the Menexenus the doubts about the authorship are deliberately emphasized by Plato. Thus, the reader is induced to question the text and grasp the author’s thought by deeply investigating the overall literary construction of the dialogue.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.