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Thucydides.
The Peloponnesian War. Vol. 2.
(Audiobook, Unabridged).
Thomasville, GA: Audio Connoisseur, [c. 400 B.C.] 2005.
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This is the second volume of the audiobook edition of Thucydides's
epic history of what was, for Hellenic civilisation, a generation-long
world war, describing which the author essentially invented historical
narrative as it has been understood ever since. For general comments
about the work, see my notes for Volume I.
Although a work of history (albeit with the invented speeches
Thucydides acknowledges as a narrative device), this is as much a
Greek tragedy as any of the Athenian plays. The war, which began,
like so many, over a peripheral conflict between two regional
hegemonies, transformed both Athens and Sparta into “warfare
states”, where every summer was occupied in military campaigns,
and every winter in planning for the next season's conflict. The
Melian dialogue,
which appears in Book V of the history, is one of the most chilling
exemplars of raw power politics ever expressed—even more than
two millennia later, it makes the soul shiver and, considering its
consequences, makes one sympathetic to those, then and now, who
decry the excesses of direct democracy.
Perhaps the massacre of the Melians offended the gods (although
Thucydides would never suggest divine influence in the affairs
of men), or maybe it was just a symptom of imperial overreach
heading directly for the abyss, but not long afterward Athens launched
the disastrous
Sicilian Expedition,
which ultimately resulted in a defeat which, on the scale of classical
conflict, was on the order of Stalingrad and resulted in the end of
democracy in Athens and its ultimate subjugation by Sparta.
Weapons, technologies, and political institutions change, but the humans who
invent them are invariant under time translation. There is wisdom in
this narrative of a war fought so very long ago which contemporary
decision makers on the global stage ignore only at the peril of the
lives and fortune entrusted to them by their constituents. If I
could put up a shill at the “town hall” meetings of
aspiring politicians, I'd like to ask them “Have you read
Thucydides?”, and when they predictably said they had, then
“Do you approve of the Athenian democracy's judgement as
regards the citizens of Melos?”
This recording includes the second four of the eight books into which
Thucydides's text is conventionally divided. The audiobook is
distributed in two parts, totalling 11 hours and 29 minutes with an
epilogue describing the events which occurred after the extant text of
Thucydides ends in mid-paragraph whilst describing events of
410 B.C., six years before the end of
the war.
The Benjamin Jowett translation is used, read by Charlton Griffin.
A print edition of this translation is
available.
August 2008