Skip to main content
Intended for healthcare professionals
Restricted access
Research article
First published online October 13, 2014

Democratic Inclusion and “Suffering Together” in The Eumenides: Duality of Immigrants

Abstract

Drawing upon the dual status of the Eumenides as metics who were neither included in nor excluded from Athenian democratic politics, this essay attempts to bring the last scene of The Eumenides to contemporary political settings wherein we observe the duality of immigrants—that is, the tension between political citizenship and cultural foreignness—in our liberal society. The controversial bride kidnapping cases among Hmong immigrants show that the liberal regulative principles such as reciprocity and mutual respect cannot work in the context of powerful and irreconcilable cultural and moral conflicts, which go beyond the line that we can tolerate in the name of cultural diversity. Instead, this essay focuses on the Athenian citizens’ and the Eumenides’ courageous decision to suffer together, not merely to live together, in an attempt to find a new possibility of democratic coexistence.

Get full access to this article

View all access and purchase options for this article.

Biographies

Se-Hyoung Yi is an assistant professor in the Department of Political Science at Trinity Christian College. His scholarly interests include comparative political theory, deliberative democracy, ancient Greek tragedy, and Confucian deliberative politics. His articles regarding these topics have appeared in Korean Political Science Review and Citizen and the World.