The Audiences o/Behemoth atid the Politics of Conversation

Authors

  • Geoffrey M. Vaughan

Keywords:

Thomas Hobbes, Behemoth, historiography, audience, political education

Abstract

Thomas Hobbes's Behemoth must be read as a dialogue if we are to understand that there are two audiences being addressed. There is the immediate audience within the dialogue, that is, the younger interlocutor. He is the audience of the history of the English Civil War as it is presented to him; he is the audience of the narrative. But there is also the audience of the dialogue as a whole, the audience of the meta-narrative. Once we understand this twofold structure we can begin to see that Behemoth is Hobbes's example of how to educate people in their duties through the use of history. Thus, Behemoth is not his history of the war, nor is it an attempt to understand the war through the prism of Hobbesean theory. Instead, it is an education for the reader in how to make his or her interlocutors into good subjects.

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Published

2016-01-03

How to Cite

Vaughan, G. M. (2016). The Audiences o/Behemoth atid the Politics of Conversation. Filozofski Vestnik, 24(2). Retrieved from https://ojs.zrc-sazu.si/filozofski-vestnik/article/view/3397

Issue

Section

Articles