Hillman, 'Essays on Plutarch's Lives', Bryn Mawr Classical Review 9508
URL = http://hegel.lib.ncsu.edu/stacks/serials/bmcr/bmcr-9508-hillman-essays
@@@@95.9.22, Scardigli, ed., Essays on Plutarch's Lives
Barbara Scardigli (ed.), Essays on Plutarch's Lives.
Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1995. Pp. 403. $72.00. ISBN
0-19-814076-2.
Reviewed by Thomas P. Hillman -- Ocean Grove, NJ
'Every scholar interested in any aspect of the ancient world',
writes B. Scardigli in her introduction (p. 28) to this volume,
'can find something of use somewhere in Plutarch: therein lies
the special attraction and unique importance of his
oeuvre.' Nothing could make that point more clearly than
the thirteen essays assembled in this volume, which, viewed
together, amply demonstrate how deeply imbued Plutarch was--in
his life and his Lives--with all of Hellenic culture and
history and the fullness of what it had to offer, both in the
long past days of its own glory and in more recent times when
'the world' had become Roman. He was, as Wilamowitz says (p. 54),
'still a Hellene to the bone'. Yet he lived in the Roman world,
and in his Lives he brought both worlds together, showing
not only that the Greeks were equal to the Romans, but also that
despite their differences the Greeks and Romans were equally
human, and thus that each group offered important lessons in
humanity. To a discipline frequently assailed for the irrelevance
of its dead white European males, Plutarch, who showed what the
original dead white Europeans males had to offer their successors
and descendants in terms of humanity, is, or should be, a figure
of special attraction and unique importance.
These of course are only the broader implications for the
Classics that this excellent collection of essays has to offer.
Even when one narrows the focus to the man and the Lives
themselves, one still finds an admirably wide range of
informative discussion on the cultural and literary aspects of
the Lives. Such discussions are essential to the study and
use of Plutarch today, for although none of the essays published
here is new, with the exception of Scardigli's introduction and
C.B.R. Pelling's postscript to his 'Plutarch's method of work in
the Roman Lives', one still often finds citations from the
Lives shuffled in and out of footnotes with careless
disregard for the aims of Plutarch's biography and for his
literary technique. As D.A. Russell warns in 'On Reading
Plutarch's Lives' (p. 75), '...it should be obvious
that...it is misleading and dangerous to use what is plainly one
of the most sophisticated products of ancient historiography
without constant regard to the plans and purposes of the author'.
This volume should serve as a useful corrective and may be added
to the other volumes of essays on Plutarch that have appeared in
the past decade (ICS 13.2 [1988]; Plutarch and the
Historical Tradition, [London, 1992]; ANRW 2.33.6
[Berlin and New York, 1992]) as the keystone of an arch through
which all may pass to a better understanding of Plutarch and his
work.
The volume begins by addressing Plutarch and the Lives
on a large scale: B. Scardigli's masterful introduction to the
literary, philosophical, historiographical, and biographical
background to the Lives, complete with an up to date
bibliography; Wilamowitz' subtle, almost breathing portrait of
Plutarch the man and biographer painted as only he could paint
it; Russell's essential article on how to read the Lives,
forewarned and forearmed; C.P. Jones' painstaking progress
towards establishing a chronology of Plutarch's works. More
detailed treatments then follow, exploring and extending many of
the avenues of approach found in the first four. Pelling's
fundamental 'Plutarch's adaptation of his source-material'
identifies and discusses in depth the techniques Plutarch used to
adapt what he found in his sources to his own purposes by
comparing his practice within related Lives. P.A.
Stadter's 'Plutarch's comparison of Pericles and Fabius Maximus'
then shows how the portraits of these men strengthen and
illuminate each other by Plutarch's focus on their common traits.
In 'Plutarch's Parallel Lives: the choice of heroes', J.
Geiger strongly argues that Plutarch's varying knowledge of
different periods of Greek history, his relatively scanty
knowledge of Roman history, and his moral purpose led him to
write about certain men rather than others. Russell's 'Plutarch,
Alcibiades 1-16' shows how much Plutarch's literary
considerations can influence the presentation of his material to
the detriment of chronology and history. J.M. Mossman, in
'Tragedy and epic in Plutarch's Alexander', again stresses
the literary element in biography, ably pointing out how Plutarch
uses epic patterning, inspired by Alexander's emulation of
Achilles, to stress the good in Alexander's character, and tragic
patterning to stress the bad. S.C.R. Swain's splendid 'Hellenic
culture and the Roman heroes of Plutarch' examines the
biographer's notion that education and culture are important
positive elements in character development, and shows how the
presence or absence of these elements in his Roman subjects, in
whom such elements cannot be assumed, reveals itself in their
character. In 'Plutarch's method of work in the Roman
Lives' Pelling argues that the Pompeius, Caesar,
Crassus, Brutus, Antonius, and Cato minor were all
researched and composed together, and examines the lessons in
this for understanding Plutarch's methods. In 'Plutarch and Roman
politics', Pelling then considers the biographer's representation
of Roman politics, and how this varies with his focus in each
Life and is influenced by his understanding of Greek
politics. Finally, Russell's 'Plutarch's Life of
Coriolanus' demonstrates how Plutarch can reinterpret and rewrite
his source-material to suit his own literary purpose, and
provides a useful lesson for all who study the Lives.
For all the many virtues of this collection, there are some
few points that call for comment. Scardigli is commendably
cautious in her treatment of what may have been the course of
biography's development prior to Plutarch, but a more explicit
statement of the caution we must employ in placing Plutarch
within this continuum would have made her introduction better
still. The criticisms Plutarch answers or anticipates in his
apology for his biographies at Alex. 1 could
suggest that his Lives differ from those of others, or,
perhaps, that Alexander-Caesar differ, and so could be
mistaken for histories because they more closely approach history
than biography generally did or than his previously published
biographies had. The latter would certainly be the case for the
very historical Caesar at least (cf. pp. 145-48, 319-20).
On pp. 142-43 Pelling quotes Alex. 1.1-2 in
translation: 'For it is not histories we are writing but Lives.
Nor is it always his most famous actions which reveal a man's
good or bad qualities: a clearer insight into a man's character
is often given by a small matter, a word or a jest, than by
engagements where thousands die, or by the greatest pitched
battles, or by sieges of cities'. There is a problem here with
'always', which purports to render pantos; and this is far
more everyone's problem than it is Pelling's. For 'always' has
long been the standard translation of pantos. Yet
pantos means not 'always', but 'in all ways', i.e.,
'absolutely' or 'completely'. And so the passage means 'nor is
the revelation of a man's good and bad qualities completely
possible [pantos enesti delosis] through his most
famous actions, but often...'. On this rendering the small deeds
complement, rather than oppose, the great. And, as 'often'
suggests, great and small deeds will appear in varying
proportions in various Lives: the more historical the
Life, the more great deeds appear; the less historical,
the more small deeds. This is far more consistent with Pelling's
analysis of Plutarch's biographical theory and practice at pp.
142-51 than 'always' would allow, a problem of which Pelling is
himself aware (cf. p. 147).
On pp. 287-88 Pelling presents a strong case for regarding the
lost history of C. Asinius Pollio as the major source for the
Pompeius, Caesar, Crassus, Brutus, Antonius, and Cato
minor from the year 60 onward. He is, however, rightly
cautious about whether Plutarch used Pollio directly or through
an intermediate source or translation which he calls the
'Pollio-source'. No certainty, as he points out, is possible, but
there is some indication that unavailability might have been the
only factor that could have prevented Plutarch from consulting
Pollio directly in Latin. For it is especially noteworthy that,
despite Plutarch's remarks on his inability to appreciate the
fine points of Latin style and rhetoric at Dem. 2.2-4,
Plutarch can nevertheless make extensive and intelligent first
hand use of information gathered from Cicero's Second
Philippic in the Antonius (see pp. 297-98). As
experience in the classroom shows, students can usually extract
information from a text even if they never reach the point of
being able to appreciate its style. On the other hand it is also
entirely possible that, since there is no reason to assume that
Plutarch discontinued his study of Latin, his Latin improved as
his research led him to read more and more Latin sources, and,
therefore, that the comments in the Demosthenes-Cicero,
the fifth pair of Lives (Dem. 3.1), were no longer
true by the time he came to research and write the
Demetrius-Antonius, probably no earlier than the sixteenth
pair (cf. Jones, pp. 106-11). If this is so, Plutarch may well
have consulted Pollio directly, though we must still be cautious.
Taken all in all then, this volume makes a long needed
contribution. One may read each essay with profit without
consulting the others, but the best way for student or scholar to
reap the full advantage is to read the book from beginning to
end. As Plutarch hoped his work would be, this work is an ouk
akhrestos historia.