Civics In A Year
One Roman name keeps popping up wherever people argue about freedom, tyranny, and what a citizen owes a republic: Cato. We follow Cato the Younger from the final days of the Roman Republic, when Julius Caesar’s rise forces a brutal choice between compromise and principle. Cato’s answer is extreme and unforgettable, and it raises the same question that keeps resurfacing in American politics: what does “republican virtue” actually demand from us? From there, we trace how Stoicism shapes Cato’s public image. We talk about the Stoic ideal of the perfectly virtuous person, why Cato becomes known as the rare politician who cannot be bribed, and how integrity can create influence even when it costs you power. Then the story turns to the chaos after Caesar’s assassination: Mark Antony’s survival, the funeral speech that whips the crowd into a riot, and Cicero’s attempt to defend liberty with words through the blistering Philippics, echoing Demosthenes’ warnings from ancient Athens. Finally, we connect Rome to the American founding through Joseph Addison’s 1712 play Cato: A Tragedy, the Valley Forge performance that helped steel Revolutionary resolve, and the surprisingly messy origins of “Give me liberty or give me death.” We end where civics always ends, with us: can a republic survive without virtuous citizens, and what does civic virtue look like when you’re not living through a revolution? If you enjoyed this, subscribe, share with a friend who loves history and politics, and leave a review with your take on what virtue means today. Check Out the Civic Literacy Curriculum [https://civics.asu.edu/civic-literacy-curriculum]! School of Civic and Economic Thought and Leadership [https://scetl.asu.edu/] Center for American Civics [https://civics.asu.edu/]
246 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Civics In A Year!