How did the Greeks respond to the experiences of uncertainty that they
so acutely made in the aftermath of Alexander the Great's world-changing
conquest of the Persian Empire? How were old values upheld and reshaped?
And how did the societies of Greek cities and royal courts accommodate
the overwhelming newfound power of Greek individuals? By developing a
custom methodology, this book tries to shed new light on the complex
textuality of the period of the Diadochi, the successors of Alexander.
In four case studies, new readings are presented of Theophrastus
Characters and Xenophon's Cyropaedia, but also of the substantial early
Hellenistic anecdotal material, as well as the Colossus of Rhodes. The
studies are united by an interest in how these texts cast the
relationships between individuals and how they constructed various media
of interrelation, such as money, friendship, women and the divine.
Reading these texts on these terms reveals how values were renegotiated
through paradoxes and inverted stories that subtly reshaped the utopias
of the 4th century BCE. Overall, the study's hypothesis is that this
particular brand of social storytelling contributed to the stabilisation
of the nascent Hellenistic world by providing new visions of society
capable of accommodating individual power and offering a new sense of
control and place.