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Ancient & Medieval Studies Colloquium presents, Susan Collins "Political Order and The Spartan Ideal: An Ancient Debate for a World in Conflict"

Tue May 7, 2024 5:15–6:15 PM

Location

Building 14, 14E-304

Description

Presented by Susan Collins, Associate Professor Department of Political Science University of Notre DameAbstract: This talk explores the significance, for classical philosophy and for us, of an ancient debate between the champions and critics of the Spartan politeia, the “regime” or “constitution” attributed to the legendary Spartan lawgiver Lycurgus. Those unfamiliar with the celebration of Sparta in the history of thought may wonder what we can learn from a debate concerning an ancient martial regime, which some modern commentators have even called a mirage or myth.Yet, however idealized, Sparta has always occupied a place in our political imagination. After the attacks of October 7th, Israeli novelist David Grossman observed that Israel must now be “both Athens and Sparta.” In the 1950s, the American scholar Samuel Huntington praised West Point and its military virtues as a “bit of Sparta in the midst of Babylon.” From the archaic period to the nineteenth century, in fact, many poets and political thinkers celebrated the Spartan politeia as the best regime. The questions at the heart of the ancient debate over Sparta, I argue, are not only central to the classical tradition. They are re-emerging with critiques of liberal constitutionalism and forms of political conflict that have undermined confidence in the once regnant model of liberal-democracy.Bio: Susan D. Collins is Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of Notre Dame. She is co-translator of Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics (Chicago 2011) and author of Aristotle and the Rediscovery of Citizenship (Cambridge 2006).
  • Ancient & Medieval Studies Colloquium presents, Susan Collins "Political Order and The Spartan Ideal: An Ancient Debate for a World in Conflict"
    Presented by Susan Collins, Associate Professor Department of Political Science University of Notre DameAbstract: This talk explores the significance, for classical philosophy and for us, of an ancient debate between the champions and critics of the Spartan politeia, the “regime” or “constitution” attributed to the legendary Spartan lawgiver Lycurgus. Those unfamiliar with the celebration of Sparta in the history of thought may wonder what we can learn from a debate concerning an ancient martial regime, which some modern commentators have even called a mirage or myth.Yet, however idealized, Sparta has always occupied a place in our political imagination. After the attacks of October 7th, Israeli novelist David Grossman observed that Israel must now be “both Athens and Sparta.” In the 1950s, the American scholar Samuel Huntington praised West Point and its military virtues as a “bit of Sparta in the midst of Babylon.” From the archaic period to the nineteenth century, in fact, many poets and political thinkers celebrated the Spartan politeia as the best regime. The questions at the heart of the ancient debate over Sparta, I argue, are not only central to the classical tradition. They are re-emerging with critiques of liberal constitutionalism and forms of political conflict that have undermined confidence in the once regnant model of liberal-democracy.Bio: Susan D. Collins is Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of Notre Dame. She is co-translator of Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics (Chicago 2011) and author of Aristotle and the Rediscovery of Citizenship (Cambridge 2006).