Terrell Carver
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Plato
Men/women and order/disorder in The Republic
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Any reader of The Republic is confronted with formidable challenges. While there is a biographical tradition about Plato, and about his mentor and teacher Socrates, the attribution of an authorial voice to Plato in the text itself is made unusually tiresome by the text itself. Exploring the ways that men and masculinities are represented in The Republic is a way of tracing out gender in a representation of social relationships. The opening of The Republic not only introduces all the characters and their masculinised world but also reaches the highest point of physical drama in the work. Certainly the 'problem' of gender-relations as they bear on women is the subject of a dramaturgical build-up in The Republic. Socrates outlines the three-class society, focusing on the education of the 'guardians', some with the military power necessary for policing and security, and some with philosophical skills necessary for ruling and making judgements.

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