The Educational Merits of Banquets and Wine Consumption in Plato’s "Symposium" and "Laws"

Authors

  • Vasileios Liotsakis University of the Peloponnese

Keywords:

Plato, Symposium, Laws, Banquets, Wine consumption

Abstract

In this paper, I endeavor to demonstrate that the similarities between the Symposium and the Athenian’s normative agenda about banquets in the Laws are so close and so many that it can justifiably be argued that in the Symposium Plato follows a system of values which we also find in its entirety in the Laws. I argue that this agenda is inextricably related in Plato’s mind to the virtue of courage, the other part of which entails practicing keeping in check one’s fears in battle. Socrates, although not the most appropriate candidate for the position of a banquet’s head, undoubtedly resists more than anyone else in the Symposium the “enemies” he confronts at the party and thereby emerges as not only the most moderate but also as the most courageous of all. 

Author Biography

Vasileios Liotsakis, University of the Peloponnese

Vasileios Liotsakis is Associate Professor of Ancient Greek Literature at the Department of Philology of the University of the Peloponnese. He specializes in ancient Greek historiography, the Platonic dialogues, and narrative theory and narratology. He has published widely on these fields and is the author of the monographs Redeeming Thucydides’ Book VIII. Narrative Artistry in the Account of the Ionian War (Berlin/Boston 2017), Alexander the Great in Arrian’s Anabasis. A Literary Portrait (Berlin/Boston 2019) and Plato’s Proto-Narratology. Metanarrative Reflections and Narrative Paradigms (Berlin/Boston 2023).

Published

16-12-2024

How to Cite

Liotsakis, V. (2024). The Educational Merits of Banquets and Wine Consumption in Plato’s "Symposium" and "Laws". Elephant & Castle, (34), 48–57. Retrieved from https://elephantandcastle.unibg.it/index.php/eac/article/view/552