34th Runciman Lecture: Prof. Jo Quinn

  • February 6, 2025 6:00 pm - 8:30 pm
  • Great Hall, KCL Strand Campus

    Strand
    Greater London, London
Ticket Price (GBP) Free Register Now
Description

34th Runciman Lecture

Prof Josephine Crawley Quinn: Anarchism, Democracy, and the Greek City

Preceded by Greek Orthodox Vespers starting at 5.15pm

This lecture emerges from a larger project on anarchism and antiquity where I’m looking at the ancient Mediterranean as a site of resistance to power, authority and state-formation. I suggest that taking what James C. Scott has called an “anarchist squint” at ancient history can offer us useful new ways to think about the operation of power, domination, inequality, disobedience, mobility, and the state. While cities, for instance, are often considered a marker or symptom of states, they can also resist hierarchical, embedded power at all levels. I’m interested here in the way that Mediterranean poleis could operate as heteropoleis or ‘unruly cities’, and I’m interested in particular in the ways in which the core institutions of Athenian ‘democracy’ could work to prevent the emergence of majority rule, and how that benefited a small and peripheral maritime polity on the margins of Persian state power.

The vote of thanks will be given by Prof. Catherine Morgan.

 

Date & Time

Thu, Feb 6, 2025 6:00 pm - 8:30 pm

Venue Details

Great Hall, KCL Strand Campus

Strand
Greater London, London Great Hall, KCL Strand Campus
Centre for Hellenic Studies

The Centre for Hellenic Studies at King's College London is a unique grouping of academics in different disciplines and departments, with interests and expertise covering more than three millennia, from Aegean prehistory to the history, language, literature and culture of Greece, Cyprus and the worldwide Greek diaspora today.Founded in 1989, the Centre is committed to promoting knowledge and understanding of Greek history, language, and culture of all periods, and in particular the fostering of research with a comparative focus, whether cross-cultural or exploring the diachronic spectrum of Hellenism itself.