Tae-Yeoun Keum is Assistant Professor of Political Science at the University of California, Santa Barbara, and was previously the Christopher Tower Junior Research Fellow at Christ Church, University of Oxford.
Well suited to the moment. The convergence of pandemic conspiracy
theories with populist narratives of globalist malfeasance shows
that the desire for stories that give meaning to our collective
experience is alive and kicking (if not exactly well)…Keum’s study
is an exercise in demystification, showing the Platonist approach
to myth to be more complex—and relevant—than we thought…Subtle and
enriching.
*Australian Book Review*
Keum establishes both that narrative myth is a persistent tool for
political theorists in modernity and antiquity, and that its use
has given rise to continuing debates on the proper content and form
of political theorizing. Those debates have sharpened as the
dangers and power of political myth have become more apparent, but
as she ably shows, the ambiguous role of myth in political
theorizing has a long history and is inescapably bound into the
texture of the canon of Western political thought.
*Bryn Mawr Classical Review*
Tak[es] up in a refreshingly original way the problem of political
myth…[Keum’s] subtle and careful text suggests that myth and work
on myth are both the cause of and the possible solution to the
polarization of political life as it manifests itself in, and
depends upon, culture.
*Hedgehog Review*
A splendid achievement.
*Mind*
The breadth of Keum’s erudition with regard to the history of
philosophy is impressive, as is the depth of her knowledge of the
texts and thinkers treated throughout.
*Review of Metaphysics*
Plato and the Mythic Tradition in Political Thought provides a
fine, original, and persuasive case for a reconsideration of
Plato’s myths and their bearing on political thought. Tae-Yeoun
Keum’s reading of Plato as a political philosopher who sees the
value of myth-making deserves a wide audience.
*Tushar Irani, author of Plato on the Value of
Philosophy*
Tae-Yeoun Keum traces a rich tradition reflecting on Plato’s use of
myth, revealing how attention to myth as a literary artifact can
modulate its relationship to unchallenged social verities and serve
in philosophical self-examination and social improvement. Her
readings of More, Bacon, Leibniz, the German Idealists, and
Cassirer are subtle and original in drawing out these themes.
*Melissa Lane, Princeton University*
An important book for our troubled times. Beginning with Plato and
extending into Plato’s reception amongst modern theorists of myth,
Keum’s guiding question is whether myth, in its ability to
captivate the mind in what might be described as a non-rational
way, can achieve forms of communication that strictly rational
thought cannot, and whether there may be a normative role for myth
to play in political discourse today.
*Angus Nicholls, Queen Mary University of London*
Myths do more than entertain. They direct our attention, structure
our psyches, and regulate our societies. By taking the
philosophical significance of myth seriously, Tae-Yeoun Keum
rediscovers the depth of Plato’s writings and offers a remarkable
new account of his legacy. Following in the rich tradition of Ernst
Cassirer and Hans Blumenberg, Keum suggests that myth and reason
are not opposites, but instead complementary parts of the human
effort to understand.
*Bryan Garsten, Yale University*
In the history of political thought it is a well-worn conceit that
politics must be founded on reason alone, while the last burning
embers of myth must be extinguished. In this thoughtful and nuanced
exploration of Plato’s legacy, Tae-Yeoun Keum seeks to qualify this
prejudice, and she directs our attention to a more generous
understanding of myth as an enduring—and perhaps even
necessary—thread in the fabric of our collective life.
*Peter E. Gordon, Harvard University*
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