La democracia romana de Fergus Millar
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.20318/revhisto.2025.9722Palabras clave:
República romana, democracia, Empirismo, Millar, Syme, Brunt, foro, Oratoria, Contiones, Polibio, Thatcher, NeoliberalismoResumen
En su libro The Roman Republic in Political Thought (que reúne sus Conferencias Jerusalén en Historia, pronunciadas en memoria de Menahem Stern), Millar se refiere a las reformas implementadas por el gobierno Thatcher en los años 80 como el contexto histórico en el que nacieron sus trabajos sobre la República romana. Sin embargo, este artículo muestra que el clima político de aquellos años no fue únicamente el contexto en el que Millar reflexionó sobre el sistema político republicano. Funcionó a modo de contraste en sus análisis históricos y constituyó uno de los ámbitos en los que pretendió intervenir a través de su investigación histórica. Su lectura de la política en la Roma republicana y de sus interpretaciones en el pensamiento político posterior se vio intrínsecamente informada por su oposición (en particular) a las políticas universitarias del gobierno durante los años 80 y 90, así como también al discurso neoliberal que las sustentaba.
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El titular de los derechos de autor de los contenidos de esta revista es el Instituto de Historiografía "Julio Caro Baroja" de la Universidad Carlos III de Madrid.