Unruly Truth: On Parrhesia and/as Political Refusal

  • Sergej Seitz University of Vienna
##plugins.pubIds.doi.readerDisplayName##: https://doi.org/10.5209/rpub.92801
Parole chiave: Bonnie Honig, Refusal, Truth-telling, Parrhesia, Intensification, Euripides, Foucault
Agenzie: This article has been funded by the European Union (ERC, PREDEF, 101055015).

Abstract

This article employs Bonnie Honig’s concepts of refusal and intensification to conceptualize the ancient practice of ‘parrhesia’ as a form of conflictual, political truth-telling. This entails envisaging political truth-telling as an intense, agonal practice that does not establish unalterable foundations but takes part in world-building practices. To this end, I first reconstruct parrhesia as an agonistic practice of truth-telling. Against this background, I take up Honig’s concept of intensification to make sense of parrhesia’s intricate political stakes with reference to Euripides’s Ion tragedy. Finally, I reenvisage the bacchants’ secession to Cithaeron against the backdrop of Michel Foucault’s analysis of the cynic tradition, where parrhesia turns into a subversive political practice of displaying and prefiguring other forms of existence and social relations.

##submission.viewcitations##

##submission.format##

##submission.crossmark##

##submission.metrics##

Pubblicato
2024-04-29
Come citare
Unruly Truth: On Parrhesia and/as Political Refusal (S. Seitz, Trad.). (2024). Res Publica. Revista de Historia de las Ideas Políticas, 27(1), 31-36. https://doi.org/10.5209/rpub.92801