Athens as a Small World

Athenian political life in the 460’s and 450’s BC centered on conflict between the Oligoi and the Demos, whose positions were articulated by Cimon and Pericles, and then Cimon’s successor, Thucydides son of Melesias. Through the building program debate in the ecclesia, and the success of Pericles ov...

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Main Author: Diane Harris Cline
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Luxembourg Centre for Contemporary and Digital History (C2DH) 2020-05-01
Series:Journal of Historical Network Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jhnr.uni.lu/index.php/jhnr/article/view/84
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spelling doaj-2a88274328514466a045223df60223db2020-11-25T02:01:15ZdeuLuxembourg Centre for Contemporary and Digital History (C2DH)Journal of Historical Network Research2535-88632535-88632020-05-014365610.25517/jhnr.v4i0.8484Athens as a Small WorldDiane Harris Cline0Columbian College of Arts and Sciences, George Washington UniversityAthenian political life in the 460’s and 450’s BC centered on conflict between the Oligoi and the Demos, whose positions were articulated by Cimon and Pericles, and then Cimon’s successor, Thucydides son of Melesias. Through the building program debate in the ecclesia, and the success of Pericles over his opponent who was ostracized, the fissure between clusters was resolved, and the Demos got the upper hand. In 1998, Anthony Podlecki wrote a book called Perikles and his Circle, and before that Philip Stadter (1991) wrote an influential article entitled “Pericles Among the Intellectuals.” To their work, we now add a formal social network analysis to study the position of Pericles in the social network of intellectuals, artists, politicians, and cultural creatives in the mid-5th century BC. The study shows clusters of varying size and relative positions in which boundaries were fluid and there was much interaction. Women feature highly in betweenness centrality. The data set includes 328 nodes, and 754 edges, built around the ego-network of Socrates, of which Pericles, political figures, and the intellectuals are members. The data consists of an edge list drawn from all of Plato, Plutarch’s lives of Cimon, Pericles, Nicias, and Alcibiades, plus Xenophon’s Memorabilia and Symposium, plus Lysias’s speeches and some of Diogenes Laertius Book 2 on Socrates.https://jhnr.uni.lu/index.php/jhnr/article/view/84athenspericlesbetweennessego-networksbiographieswomensmall world
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Diane Harris Cline
spellingShingle Diane Harris Cline
Athens as a Small World
Journal of Historical Network Research
athens
pericles
betweenness
ego-networks
biographies
women
small world
author_facet Diane Harris Cline
author_sort Diane Harris Cline
title Athens as a Small World
title_short Athens as a Small World
title_full Athens as a Small World
title_fullStr Athens as a Small World
title_full_unstemmed Athens as a Small World
title_sort athens as a small world
publisher Luxembourg Centre for Contemporary and Digital History (C2DH)
series Journal of Historical Network Research
issn 2535-8863
2535-8863
publishDate 2020-05-01
description Athenian political life in the 460’s and 450’s BC centered on conflict between the Oligoi and the Demos, whose positions were articulated by Cimon and Pericles, and then Cimon’s successor, Thucydides son of Melesias. Through the building program debate in the ecclesia, and the success of Pericles over his opponent who was ostracized, the fissure between clusters was resolved, and the Demos got the upper hand. In 1998, Anthony Podlecki wrote a book called Perikles and his Circle, and before that Philip Stadter (1991) wrote an influential article entitled “Pericles Among the Intellectuals.” To their work, we now add a formal social network analysis to study the position of Pericles in the social network of intellectuals, artists, politicians, and cultural creatives in the mid-5th century BC. The study shows clusters of varying size and relative positions in which boundaries were fluid and there was much interaction. Women feature highly in betweenness centrality. The data set includes 328 nodes, and 754 edges, built around the ego-network of Socrates, of which Pericles, political figures, and the intellectuals are members. The data consists of an edge list drawn from all of Plato, Plutarch’s lives of Cimon, Pericles, Nicias, and Alcibiades, plus Xenophon’s Memorabilia and Symposium, plus Lysias’s speeches and some of Diogenes Laertius Book 2 on Socrates.
topic athens
pericles
betweenness
ego-networks
biographies
women
small world
url https://jhnr.uni.lu/index.php/jhnr/article/view/84
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