What is the point of these proliferating ‘Thucydides and coronavirus’ takes? Besides giving different academics a chance to get an article into one or other prestigious publication, obviously – never let a good crisis go to waste… This was one of the key themes that emerged in the course of an online discussion this morning with at least some of my final-year Thucydides class, for the final session of the year (and I can’t quite believe how emotional I feel about having a chance to interact with some students, rather than just creating discussion topics that no one comments on and launching audio files into the void…).
If there is a point besides self-advertisement, it’s not a consistent one. Some takes seem focused on reassurance – if only that Thucydides was able to make sense of such events, 2500 years ago, so we should feel okay about it. Others take the opposite tack, seeing the new Plague as the thing that will finally trigger the Thucydides Trap they’ve been confidently predicting for some years – or as something that will sound the death-knell for democracy (whatever happened to the fourth century..?). It makes me feel like a bit of an outlier, since – in my contribution to the ongoing flood, an interview for a podcast at the War on the Rocks website – I took the line that the Plague seems to have had remarkably little effect on the ability of the Athenians to wage war, apart from the possible consequences of the death of Pericles.
Obviously if Xi does get Corvid-19 and is replaced by a new generation of more aggressive and reckless leaders, indulging the demands of the people for an aggressive strategy, we should all start worrying.
I have been tempted to pitch something on the Lament for Ur, the Erra Epic, or maybe Ea’s words to the reed hut:
Abandon riches, seek survival!
Spurn property, save life!
(Standard Babylonian Epic of Gilgameš, XI.25-26)
The way some people see a deadly plague strike their land and the first thing they think of is how it will affect their teenaged status struggle with another country on the far side of the world that they have never visited is striking isn’t it! Empires do odd things to the minds of their would-be rulers.
That’s *much* more interesting, simply because it’s new – the problem with a lot of the Thucydides ones is that they seem to be intended as familiar and hence reassuring.