TY - JOUR TI - Life as citizenship: about the metaphorics of political in late Antiquity and Byzantium T2 - The Russian Sociological Review IS - The Russian Sociological Review KW - Christianity KW - state KW - politics KW - conceptual history KW - metaphorology KW - universalism KW - republicanism AB - The article discusses the polysemous Byzantine concept πολιτεία ("state, citizenship, way of life"), considering it from the viewpoint of conceptual history. Based on an overview of contemporary scholarship that places the Byzantine state in relation to the history of society and history of culture, I suggest a new approach to the Byzantine conceptual apparatus combining elements of the traditional history of concepts and Hans Blumenberg’s metaphorology. I also advance the hypothesis that the distinctive semiotic regime, in which Byzantine concepts operated, resulted from a reorganization — and partial reduction — of the system of classical knowledge. In Graeco-Roman antiquity, the world was conceived of as comprising four levels, each demanding distinct approach: the universe (cosmos), human community existing within the structures of the polis, the household (oikos), and the individual’s character (ethos). These levels corresponded to four domains of knowledge. Cosmogony studied the interaction of the cosmic elements. Politics occupied itself with community. Economy (oikonomia) was approached mostly on practical terms. Human character was investigated by ethics. A new configuration of concepts established in the classical period emerged in Byzantium, these concepts shifted from one level to another, or simultaneously occupied several levels. The understanding of these processes demands attention to the two following factors; first, the meaning of specialized concepts was safeguarded by the continuity linking the Byzantine culture to the classical philosophical paradigm; second, Christian universalism invited the construction of homologous conceptual structures, thus contributing to their incessant metaphorization. AU - Boris Maslov UR - https://sociologica.hse.ru/en/2012-11-1/53702414.html PY - 2012 SP - 3-18 VL - 11