'Dogs, ticks, monsters, madmen: The role(s) of the demagogues in the Ancient Greek class struggle'

Beginning with the earliest assessments of the Athenian democracy from antiquity, the figure of the “demagogue” has been successively vilified, rehabilitated, redefined, neutralized, or vindicated according to the political and ideological assumptions of the historian. This talk seeks to situate the figure of the dēmagōgos in his historical context as a participant in the ancient Greek class struggle. That means not denying the demagogues’ role in (occasionally) precipitating civil strife but at the same time not allowing modern categories to obscure the place of the “leader of the people” in the overall political system––as a (humble and precariously perched) agent of the sovereign people, only rarely its master.

Professor Matt Simonton 

Matt Simonton is Associate Professor of History at Arizona State University. His research to date has focused on Classical Greek constitutional systems, civil war and reconciliation in the ancient world, comparative studies of democracy and authoritarianism, and the history of ancient Greek democracies.”

Professor Matt Simonton
Professor Matt Simonton