Xavier University Exhibit Faculty Scholarship Classics 2010 A Philology of Liberation: Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. as a Reader of the Classics Thomas E. Strunk Xavier University - Cincinnati Follow this and additional works at:http://www.exhibit.xavier.edu/classics_faculty Part of theAncient History, Greek and Roman through Late Antiquity Commons,Ancient Philosophy Commons,Byzantine and Modern Greek Commons,Classical Archaeology and Art History Commons,Classical Literature and Philology Commons,Indo-European Linguistics and Philology Commons, and theOther Classics Commons Recommended Citation Strunk, Thomas E., "A Philology of Liberation: Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. as a Reader of the Classics" (2010).Faculty Scholarship. Paper 16. http://www.exhibit.xavier.edu/classics_faculty/16 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Classics at Exhibit. It has been accepted for inclusion in Faculty Scholarship by an authorized administrator of Exhibit. For more information, please [email protected]. Verbum lncarnatum A Philology of Liberation: Dr Martin Luther King, Jr. as a Reader of the Classics A Philology of Liberation: Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. as a Reader of the Classics Thomas Strunk, Ph.D. Xavier University Abstract This paper explores the intellectual relationship between Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and the classics, particularly the works ofP lato, Sophocles, and Aeschylus. Recognizing Dr. King as a reader of the classics is significant for two reasons: the classics played a formative role in Dr. King's development into a political activist and an intellectual of the first order; moreover, Dr. King shows us the way to read the classics. Dr. King did not read the classics in a pedantic or even academic manner, but for the purpose of liberation. Dr. King's legacy, thus, is not merely his political accomplishments but also his example as a philologist ofl iberation. Obama and the New America In the autumn of 2008, I happened to be teaching a course on ancient Greek civilization in which we read, amongst others, Aeschylus' Agamemnon, Sophocles' Antigone, and Plato's dialogues on the trial and death of Socrates. Throughout the course of the semester I felt that many of the ideas we read about and discussed were somehow charged with the Zeitgeist of the presidential election and the attendant rhetoric and analysis of what it meant for the United States to elect a black man as president. I was delighted that this course on an ancient civilization could so easily join in conversation with the present. America has come down from those precipitous heights where we were in November 2008 and January 2009, and once again we are living in the comfortable and familiar dregs of modem American politics where we fight over important matters like healthcare reform, unemployment, and military strategy in Iraq and Afghanistan. But I would like to return briefly to November 2008 and 124 Verbum lncarnatum A Philology of Liberation: Dr Martin Luther King, Jr. as a Reader of the Classics January 2009. I feel those are important days for us to remember as Americans. For what was achieved was not merely the election of a Democrat or the inauguration of a black man, or more specifically a man of mixed race, as president. But rather what I feel, and what I think many others feel, is that America as a country overcame an impediment placed before us by our ancestors who established race-based slavery in the United States. We have been relieved of a great burden, much more quickly than anyone, black or white, really imagined was possible. Within the last decade there have been movies, such as Chris Rock's "Head of State" (2003), about a black president, as if this were fantasy. But this is not fantasy; in truth we have rapidly come to find that we are not that racist, or at least that we are not racist in the way we thought we were. I do not "We have been mean to gloss over any still-existing manifestations of racism or pretend that since relieved of a great we elected an African American president that we are suddenly free from our burden, much more quickly than past. We are not; studies continue to reveal that African Americans anyone, black or disproportionally lack access to adequate resources in education, healthcare, and white, really imagined was housing. Nonetheless, it is hard to deny that political life in America is somehow possible." profoundly changed by the election of2008. John McCain (2008) himself recognized this in his concession speech, saymg: This is an historic election, and I recognize the special significance it has for African-Americans and for the special pride that must be theirs tonight. I've always believed that America offers opportunities to all who have the industry and will to seize it. Senator Obama believes that, too. But we both recognize that though we have come a long way from the old injustices that once stained our nation's reputation and denied some Americans the full blessings of American citizenship, the memory of them still had the power to wound. · A century ago, President Theodore Roosevelt's invitation of Booker T. Washington to visit -- to dine at the White House was taken as an outrage in many quarters. America today is a world away from the cruel and prideful bigotry of 125 Verbum lncarnatum A Philology of Liberation: Dr Martin Luther King, Jr. as a Reader of the Classics that time. There is no better evidence of this than the election of an African American to the presidency of the United States. I would like to suggest that in this new light we might better understand our past and our dialogue with it. It is a commonplace that Barack Obama has reaped the rewards of an earlier generation's struggle for civil rights. We have heard repeatedly that Barack Obama's election is a direct result of the civil rights movement and individuals like Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Such sentiments have been expressed by such diverse individuals as Tom Brokaw (Rose, 2008), a trusted, mainstream voice of traditional gravitas, and Michael Eric Dyson (2008), an outspoken African American professor of sociology at Georgetown University (Pratt, 2008). I would like to argue that Barack Obama has also, perhaps ... unwittingly, reaped the rewards of an earlier generation's intellectual struggle. "By no means am I attempting to argue Since the publication of Frederick Douglass' Narrative of a Life of that Dr. King's Frederick Douglass, an American Slave, Written by Himself (1982), wherein he thought and subsequent actions are recounts his furtive and illegal attempts to gain knowledge, the intellectual life of purely derivative from African Americans has been recognized as contested terrain. The question of what classical learning." ... is the proper subject of study for African Americans was hotly debated at the tum of the nineteenth century made famous by thinkers such as W.E.B. Dubois (1999) and William Sanders Scarborough (2006), who argued for higher learning with a classical curriculum, and Booker T. Washington (1995), who maintained the need for an industrial education. In this paper, I am focusing on the intellectual background of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. specifically. To the question of influences on Dr. King's intellectual formation, there are some obvious answers that take precedence over all the others: there are the lived experiences of those who were direct ancestors in the civil rights struggle, those women and men, black and white who fought against racial discrimination for generations long before Dr. King and Rosa Parks came along; the African American church as an institution and the writings of the Old and New Testaments, which surely strengthened and inspired many to take such bold and 126 Verbum lncarnatum A Philology of Liberation: Dr Martin Luther King, Jr. as a Reader of the Classics decisive action, placing themselves before angry mobs and in dirty jail cells, or worse; there are also the non-violent teachings of Mohandas Gandhi, Henry David Thoreau, and Bayard Rustin. I would like to explore another less-considered intellectual influence: the classical tradition. I want to consider how Dr. King read the classics, in particular those authors I mentioned earlier: Plato, Sophocles, and Aeschylus. First a caveat. By no means am I attempting to argue that Dr. King's thought and subsequent actions are purely derivative from classical learning. Rather I hope to show the breadth of learning that Dr. King acquired and how he incorporated that learning into his life's work. I hope the reader will accept what follows as a further demonstration of Dr. King's claim to being regarded as a first-rate intellect and not as an effort to re-appropriate his accomplishments for a ,. ., particular discipline. Such a life cannot be confined to any narrow interpretation. "America today is a world away from the Dr. King and Plato's Socrates on Nonviolence cruel and prideful bigotry of that time." I would like to start with Dr. King's philosophy of nonviolence. King wrote that he first encountered the concept of non-violence in a book, which he ... • correctly saw as a conversation with the past about the present. The book was Thoreau's Essay on Civil Disobedience, which King read while a freshman at Morehouse College (20 I Oa, p. 78). There is an important point here worth emphasizing: Dr. King was not solely an activist; he was a reader and intellectual who developed into someone we should consider both a theologian and philosopher. Through the combination of King's reading of Thoreau and later Gandhi and then his interactions with Bayard Rustin and his experiences during the Montgomery bus boycott, Dr. King developed a philosophy of nonviolence based on six principals as outlined in Stride Toward Freedom (20 I Oa, pp. 90-95), King's earliest book. They are worth summarizing here. I. "Nonviolent resistance is not a method for cowards; it does resist." 127 Verbum Jncarnatum A Philology of Liberation: Dr Martin Luther King, Jr. as a Reader of the Classics 2. Nonviolence "does not seek to defeat or humiliate the opponent, but to win his friendship and understanding". 3. "The attack is directed against forces of evil rather than against persons who happen to be doing the evil". 4. Nonviolence includes "a willingness to accept suffering without retaliation, to accept blows from the opponent without striking back". 5. Nonviolent resistance "avoids not only external physical violence but also internal violence of spirit"; the resister should be motivated by love in the sense of the Greek word agape, which "means understanding, redeeming goodwill for all men". .. 6. Nonviolent resistance "is based on the conviction that the universe is on ,. the side of justice". "To be certain, Dr. King and Socrates at I cite these principals and Dr. King's mention of Thoreau to show the fruit that this point are talking reading the great works of human literature can bear. Alexander Pope's words about two slightly different things: from An Essay on Man (2003 p. 281 ), often in the minds of men like Du Bois and violence and Scarborough, apply here: "The proper study of mankind is man". injustice." These ideas on nonviolence presented as they are by King suggest few parallels with the Greco-Roman world pervaded by war, the violence of slavery and the gladiatorial arena. Yet there are affinities, nonetheless, with works King read as a student at Crozer Seminary in his course on Greek religion, namely Plato's Apology and Crito (West, 2000). We can compare Plato's (trans. 2003) account of Socrates in his own jail cell conversing with Crito, to whom he says, Do we say that there is no way that one must ever willingly commit injustice, or does it depend upon circumstance? Is it true, as we have often agreed before, that there is no sense in which an act of injustice is good or honorable? Or have we jettisoned all our former convictions in these last few days? Can you and I at our age, Crito, have spent all these years in serious discussions without realizing that we were no better than a pair of children? Surely the truth is just what we have always said. Whatever the popular view is, and whether the consequence is pleasanter than this or even tougher, the fact remains that to commit injustice is in every case bad 128 Verbum /ncarnatum A Philology of Liberation: Dr Martin Luther King, Jr. as a Reader of the Classics and dishonorable for the person who does it. (C rito 49a3-b6) To be certain, Dr. King and Socrates at this point are talking about two slightly different things: violence and injustice. A few lines later in the dialogue, however, Socrates asks Crito to clarify his position, I want even you to consider very carefully whether you share my views and agree with me, and whether we can proceed with our discussion from the established hypothesis that it is never right to commit injustice or return injustice or defend one's self against injury by retaliation; or whether you dissociate yourself from any share in this view as a basis for discussion. I have held it for a long time, and still hold it. (Crito 49d5-e3) I would not want to argue that Socrates (or Plato) was a philosopher of nonviolence. After all, we do know that Socrates served as a hoplite and fought .. .. bravely in several battles during the Peloponnesian War, specifically the Potidea campaign and at Delium in 424 B.C.E. (Symposium 219d3-22lcl). However, it "I want even you to consider very should be noted that he did refuse to participate in the execution of the generals carefully whether you after the battle of Arginusae in 406 B.C.E. under the democracy and the execution share my views and agree with me." of Leon of Salamis in 403 B.C.E. under the Thirty Tyrants (Apology 32c3-e2). ... Nonetheless, Socrates' point in the Crito resonates with Dr. King's fourth principle of non-violence: the willingness "to suffer without retaliation". Furthermore, Socrates' words to Crito harmonize with Dr. King's philosophy of nonviolence and point to the radical nature of one of the fundamental tenets of Socratic-Platonic philosophy: we would do better to suffer injustice than to commit injustice (Gorgias 474bl-475e6). I have a difficult time reading those words without images coming to mind of attack dogs and fire hoses turned against African Americans in Birmingham or young students, black and white, defiantly yet calmly enduring the taunts of an angry mob at a lunch counter in Jackson, Mississippi - images made famous by the photography of Bill Hudson and Charles Moore. When we see such images we can readily identify who is 129 Verbum lncarnatum A Philology of Liberation: Dr Martin Luther King, Jr. as a Reader of the Classics committing the injustice and who is demonstrating a certain nobility of spirit and virtue of fortitude. According to Plato (trans. 2003), Socrates himself seems to have captured the essence of those images in words he reportedly spoke shortly before his own death: Neither Meletus nor Anytus can do me any harm at all; they would not have the power, because I do not believe that the law of God permits a better man to be harmed by a worse. No doubt my accuser might put me to death or have me banished or deprived of civic rights; but even if he thinks as he probably does (and others too, I dare say), that these are great calamities, I do not think so; I believe that it is far worse to do what he is doing now, trying to put a man to death unjustly. (Apology 30c-d) Neither Socrates nor Dr. King sought to retaliate or escape the use of force l by their enemies. Socrates remained in his jail cell, just as Dr. King sat in his jail cell rather than eluding the law, using force or money and influence to escape. "King's arrest came And in the end Dr. King and Socrates have been proven right in their judgments. on Good Friday, [ April 121h." Socrates held the Athenians responsible for their decision, which they have labored under ever since, just as Dr. King condemned Birmingham, Alabama 1963 to the international reputation of Bombingham, America's most segregated city. Direct Action I would like to focus now on Dr. King's Letter from Birmingham Jail, which King wrote in April 1963 in response to "moderate" clergy who criticized his activities in Birmingham and later included in his account of the Birmingham campaign, Why We Can't Wait, from which 1 cite. King was in Birmingham as part of the local campaign to protest the city's segregation laws (King, 2000). The desegregation campaign began just after the mayoral election of the moderate Albert Boutwell, who beat out the notorious segregationist and commissioner of public safety "Bull" Connor. The campaign included all the actions we now 130 Verbum lncarnatum A Philology of Liberation: Dr Martin Luther King, Jr. as a Reader of the Classics associate with the tactics of the civil rights movement: lunch-counter sit-ins, marches, boycotts, and the like. King's arrest came on Good Friday, April l21 h, after he participated in a march without the proper permit. He was kept in solitary confinement without access to books and paper, yet during that confinement written in the margins of the Birmingham News he scribbled his epistle, which has rightfully become one of the fundamental writings of American democracy. Moreover, King did this while his wife, Coretta, was back home in Atlanta, Georgia tending to their two week old daughter. Once enough bail money was raised, King was released on April 20, 1963 after a week in jail. By then the letter was being mimeographed and published as a pamphlet by the American Friends Service Committee. Among the many points King raised in his letter is the question of direct action, which brought much tension and strife to the cities he visited. In his Letter "If you put me to death, you will not from Birmingham Jail, King wrote (2000), easily find anyone But I must confess that I am not afraid of the word 'tension.' I have to take my place." earnestly opposed violent tension, but there is a type of constructive, nonviolent tension which is necessary for growth. Just as Socrates felt that it was necessary to create a tension in the mind so that individuals could rise from the bondage of myths and half-truths to the unfettered realm of creative analysis and objective appraisal, so must we see the need for nonviolent gadflies to create the kind of tension in society that will help men rise from the dark depths of prejudice and racism to the majestic heights of understanding and brotherhood. (p. 90) King's mention of Socrates' gadfly-like activities in Athens refers to Socrates' defense, where Socrates says, If you put me to death, you will not easily find anyone to take my place. To put it bluntly (even if it sounds rath~r comical) God has assigned me to this city, as if to a large thoroughbred horse which because of its great size is inclined to be lazy and needs the stimulation of some stinging fly. It seems to me that God has attached me to this city to perform the office of such a fly; and all day long I never cease to settle here, there, and everywhere, rousing, persuading, reproving every one of you. You will not easily find another like me, gentlemen, and if you take my advice you will spare my life. But perhaps before long you may awake from your 131 Verbum /ncarnatum A Philology of Liberation: Dr Martin Luther King, Jr. as a Reader of the Classics drowsing, and in your annoyance take Anytus' s advice and finish me off thoughtlessly with a single slap; and then you could go on sleeping till the end of your days, unless God in his care for you sends someone to take my place. (Apology 30el-3la7) Socrates' description of his activities in Athens provided King with a useful exemplar (Fulkerson, 1979). For Socrates does not shy away from portraying his activities as shaking the Athenians out of their torpor and rousing them to more virtuous behavior. And is not this activity the basis of democratic citizenship? Democracy is vibrant when there is tension, when there are gadflies about. Earlier I wrote that America has come down from our dizzying heights of the election and inauguration back to the dregs of everyday democracy. But isn't it wonderful to be here where there is wrangling over our health-care system, where there is wrangling over just and unjust wars. We might all enjoy a period of • • respite and silence, and those are necessary for reflection, but the day that we "The answer lies in the fact that there are cease to have agitation and strife, when decisions are made smoothly and quietly two types of laws: just by the unquestioned wisdom of one person or perhaps a few, is the day that we no .. and unjust." • longer live in a republic. So we want to see and even to encourage the agitation of which Socrates and Dr. King speak. Just and Unjust Laws Well, what is all this agitation and tension over? The "moderate" clergy who opposed the direct action of King did so on the basis that King was breaking the law. They raised a natural objection to King's willingness to break some laws, such as marching without a permit, while insisting on obedience to other laws, such as the Brown vs. Board of Education Supreme Court decision against segregation in public schools in 1954. King responded that the actions of civil rights demonstrators were not in contradiction by arguing that a distinction had to be made between just and unjust laws. In the letter King writes (2000), One may ask: "How can you advocate breaking some laws and obeying others?" The answer lies in the fact that there are two types of laws: just 132
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