Too, 'Greek Orators IV Andocides', Bryn Mawr Classical Review 9512
URL = http://hegel.lib.ncsu.edu/stacks/serials/bmcr/bmcr-9512-too-greek
@@@@95.12.19, Edwards, Greek Orators IV -- Andocides
M. J. Edwards, Greek Orators IV Andocides. Warminster:
Ares and Phillips, 1995. Pp. 216. $24.95. ISBN 0 85668 528 3
(pb).
Reviewed by Yun Lee Too, Classics and Ancient History
-- University of Liverpool
Mark Edwards' edition and commentary on the surviving speeches of
Andocides (including the often disputed Against Alcibiades
(Or. 4)) makes the point that classical Greek prose is
more than the historians and more than the philosophers. Greek
oratory is no less a major aspect of the politics, thought and
culture of democratic Athens, and thus demands attention from
literary scholars and historians of culture and thought, as the
work of individuals George Kennedy, Donald Russell, Rosalind
Thomas and Josaiah Ober among others insist.[[1]]
Edwards' text of the surviving four speeches in the Andocidean
corpus, volume 4 in the Aris and Phillips series Greek
Orators, is part of a specific and concerted effort by
classicists to make Attic oratory available and accessible to
readers.[[2]] His edition has an evident proselytizing function.
It is first and foremost a volume which re-presents an author
classified by K. J. Maidment in his 1941 Loeb edition a 'minor
Attic orator' with the suggestions of marginality and relative
insignificance that such a designation implies to the student of
Greek. Edwards is making the point that this author can have an
important pedagogical value even if, and precisely because, he is
not as difficult as Thucydides (in the speeches) or as Plato
(particularly in the passages of mythical narrative). And to this
end the editor does all he can to oblige. The facing-page
English translation aspires to 'accuracy' rather than 'elegance',
as he declares, to enable students to Greek to focus on what they
are reading without the distraction of having to refer to the
notes (p. iv). What he rightly and sensibly recognises is that a
translation does not have to be a crib but can serve as an
important tool of Greek language learning. Edwards succeeds in
making the reader's encounter with the speeches of Andocides
painless and enlightening in other ways. He provides a general
introduction providing details regarding the life and career of
Andocides and his family background, and offering discussion of
the orator's work and of classical Greek rhetoric with attention
to received scholarly views (ancient and modern) about the
author.
The audience is never made to feel inadequate or ignorant about a
body of literature that is currently understudied in classics
programmes. The commentary to the speeches gives priority to
making the text of Andocides accessible. Edwards cites D. M.
McDowell's Oxford edition of On the Mysteries (Oxford,
1962) as the incentive for the current edition, and comparison
with this more traditional and extremely learned volume shows
that the subsequent volume is not aimed at the specialist
scholar. Edwards comments on his translation, rather than on the
original Greek text, remaining true to his initial claim that the
edition is for the student of Greek. He refuses to overburden
the reader with excessive detail or with scholarly debate on
particular historical issues. Rather he gives the background he
deems necessary to assist comprehension, selecting to elucidate
dates, historical personalities, and events where the question of
the text as historical source is concerned and structural,
argumentative and stylistic components where the text as an
example of Attic oratory, indeed 'an example of a pure Attic
Greek of the late fifth and early fourth centuries' (p. 4), is
concerned. The edition points the audience who may have research
interests or find her appetite for rhetorical culture whetted to
further avenues of inquiry with an up-to-date bibliography,
although the excellent collection of essays by P. Cartledge, P.
Millett and S. Todd (eds.) Nomos. Essays in Athenian Law,
Politics and Society (Cambridge, 1990) escapes mention. One
also notes a Eurocentric emphasis as only Martin Ostwald's volume
From Popular Sovereignty to the Sovereignty of Law is
mentioned and no acknowledgement of Josaiah Ober's recent and
influential work is made (see footnote 1).
By a curious irony in his desire to make Andocides known and
interesting to the classical student, Edwards may inadvertently
impair his project. He desperately wants the reader to understand
more about the political background--e.g. the affair of the
Mysteries, the problem of Alcibiades--and about the rhetorical
culture that produced these speeches. But in so doing, Edwards
misses the larger point about rhetorical discourse, namely that
any institutional and discursive validity it has comes from the
fact that the audience can never know the whole truth of any
matter, past, present or future. This Gorgias had notoriously
declared in section 11 of the Encomium of Helen, and
acknowledged in part by Andocides when he observes that a speaker
has to invoke the past in speaking about the future at On the
Peace with the Spartans 3.2. It is thus that an orator
produces arguments based on probability (to eikos) and
common opinion (doxa) and constructs images and depictions
of events, of himself and of others which are to all intents and
purposes lies which resemble the truth. Hence the historical
'errors' in On the Peace to which Edwards draws attention
at p. 108--Rosalind Thomas has shown 'history,' and especially
personal history, to be always fluid and open to rewriting.[[3]]
Rhetorical language is always one of at least two different, but
equally authoritative, accounts of the way things are, and on
this point Edwards is misleading as he reinstates the
conventional dichotomy between rhetoric and truth at p. 14,
'Andocides' account is, of course, biased, and we have no way of
testing its veracity. It is possible, however, to analyse its
rhetorical purpose. . . '. The introduction of 'truth' as a
standard is and has too frequently been a red-herring in
contemporary studies of classical rhetoric.
Edwards' failure to entertain the arbitrariness and also the
idiosyncracies of Andocidean rhetoric is also evident when he
seeks to stress the orator's technicality, as the aspect of
rhetoric which is most readily quantified and measured. We are
given notes on the genres (p. 89), on proofs (pisteis), on
slander (diabole) (p. 180), and frequent invocations of
Aristotelian discussions of rhetoric and its figures (e.g. p.
173) in an attempt to establish the conventionality and
conformity of Andocides' language, although Edwards also has to
concede that the Aristotelian taxonomy of genres does not apply
to On the Peace (p. 105). Edwards creates the impression
that the appeal to techne will support and justify the
view that the orator is a worthwhile specimen of classical
rhetoric.[[4]] Yet in citing Aristotle as a 'witness' to
Andocides' value, Edwards misses the point that in rhetoric
witnesses don't necessarily tell the truth but are always
partisan supporters (cf. Todd in Cartledge, Millett and Todd 1990
pp. 20, 37-8; also S. Humphreys History and Anthropology 1
(1985) 331-69). The 'arts' of rhetoric are not always helpful
interpretive aids where an author's playfulness might be
concerned. For instance, Andocides' references to himself
uttering aporrheta, literally 'unsayables', at 2.3 (also
cf. en aporrhetoi, 2.19-21) receives no comment even
though this is the term which denotes prohibited slanders, such
as calling someone a 'parricide', a 'matricide', a 'deserter' or
'shield-thrower' (see Lysias Or. 10). Appeal to the
definition of aporrheta would not by itself alert the
reader to the fact that the speaker is testing the political
climate of forgiveness, precisely by repudiating the view that he
is a parricide (see 2.7).
Edwards also shows himself manipulable as a reader of rhetorical
iconography. He cites only to reject the ancient views that
Andocides was not a good orator, and he accepts the biographical
details that he was not a logographer and did not speak
frequently to his credit in light of his inclusion in the canon
(p. 4). But here one might read against the received opinions the
self-portraiture produced in the speeches themselves, and which
Edwards shows himself disinclined to accept when he expresses his
reservations about Anna Missiou's reading of oration 3 as
oligarchical propaganda (pp. 109-13; cf. Missiou The
Subversive Oratory of Andokides (Cambridge, 1992) p. 29 on
oligarchical rhetoric and p. 48 on liturgies). Edwards
acknowledges this when he speaks of his subject as a 'proud,
dyed-in-the-wool aristocrat' (p. 6) but he draws back from the
implications of this for reading the speeches. Certainly,
Andocides' references to his performance of public services or
liturgies (e.g. 1.132, 2.11), his identification with his
ancestors (e.g. 1.141, 2.25-6), the whole argument for peace with
Sparta and his archaic style, as noted by MacDowell (p. 19) point
to the quietist outlook of the conservative aristocrat of
fourth-century Athens, not unlike his fellow rhetorician
Isocrates. I would claim too that the technical flaws which
Edwards ascribes to Andocides (p. 5) may be part of the orator's
self-characterisation as the non-habitual speaker, the man who
minds his own business in contrast to the professional litigants
and sycophants, and who most often articulates this through the
trope 'unaccustomed as I am to public speaking'.
I have a more agnostic approach to ancient rhetoric than Edwards.
Where the latter seeks certainties and knowledge from the text,
my tendency is to explore the ways in which the text exploits its
reader's uncertainties and ignorances. But Edwards' volume
clearly succeeds on the terms that have been established for his
edition, as an eminently approachable and reader-friendly
textbook which can only assist in the revival of the study of
Greek oratory and its immensely rich culture.
NOTES
[[1]] E.g. Kennedy's recent A New History of Classical
Rhetoric (Princeton, 1994); D. Russell Greek
Declamation (Cambridge, 1983); J. Ober Mass and Elite in
Democratic Athens: Rhetoric, Ideology and the Power of the
People (Princeton, 1989) and R. Thomas Oral Tradition and
Written Recond in Classical Athens (Cambridge, 1989).
[[2]] To date the Aris and Phillips series gives us M. Edwards
and S. Usher (eds.) Antiphon and Lysias; S. Usher (ed.)
Isocrates; S. Usher (ed.) Demosthenes and C. Carey
(ed.) Apollodorus, while the Cambridge series offers us C.
Carey and R. A. Reid Demosthenes. Selected Private Speeches
(Cambridge, 1985) and C. Carey Lysias. Selected
Speeches (Cambridge, 1989).
[[3]] Thomas 1989 p. 151.
[[4]] See Y. L. Too The Rhetoric of Identity in Isocrates:
Text, Power, Pedagogy (Cambridge, 1995) pp. 164-72 on the
authority of techne in the history of rhetoric.