Name Josiah Ober | Role Educator | |
Awards Guggenheim Fellowship for Humanities, US & Canada Books Democracy and knowledge, Mass and elite in democrati, Political dissent in democrati, Origins of Democracy in Ancient, The Athenian revolution |
Josiah Ober - Demopolis: Democracy, Legitimacy, and Civic Education
Josiah Ober is an American historian of ancient Greece and classical political theorist. He is Tsakopoulos-Kounalakis Professor in honor of Constantine Mitsotakis, and Professor of Classics and Political Science, at Stanford University. His teaching and research links ancient Greek history and philosophy with modern political theory and practice.
Contents
- Josiah Ober Demopolis Democracy Legitimacy and Civic Education
- Defining the Humanities Democracy
- Career
- Authored
- Co Authored
- Edited
- References
Defining the Humanities: Democracy
Career
Ober was educated at the University of Minnesota (B.A., Major in History, 1975) and the University of Michigan (Ph.D., Department of History, 1980).
He was a Professor of Ancient History at Montana State University (1980–1990), and then at Princeton University (1990–2006).
He has received fellowships from numerous institutions, including the American Council of Learned Societies (1989–90) and the National Endowment for the Humanities (1997). He delivered the 2002-2003 Sigmund H. Danziger, Jr. Memorial Lecture in the Humanities at the University of Chicago.
Ober was a student of the distinguished American ancient Greek historian Chester Starr, and has been the teacher of many scholars, such as the classicist John Ma, ancient Greek historian Emily Mackil, and the political theorist Ryan Balot.
His early work has been criticized by scholars such as Mogens Herman Hansen for over-emphasizing the ideological aspect of Athenian democracy against its institutional dimension, and his more recent writing has been accused by P.J. Rhodes of abandoning scholarly impartiality in favour of democratic advocacy. In a long-form review of The Rise and Fall of Classical Greece for the New Left Review, the classicist Peter Rose concluded that Ober had produced 'an eccentric, at times intriguing, but deeply flawed work of history, which ultimately tells us more about the ideology of the Stanford classics department than it does about ancient Greece'.
On the whole, however, Ober's work has been well received. For example, Paul Cartledge has called Mass and Elite in Democratic Athens 'a seminal work', and Jennifer Roberts has called Political Dissent in Democratic Athens 'a major contribution to a dialogue of enormous import'. "Ober draws on empirical evidence about the ancient world in the service of normative political theory, and in so doing sheds light not just on Athens but on the creation and operation of democratic institutions", writes professor of politics Melissa Lane. Danielle Allen, classicist and political theorist, also praised Ober's "Democracy and Knowledge' in The New Republic (2008).