ABSTRACT

Socrates’s wife Xanthippe has entered the popular imagination as a shrewish character who dumps water on the inattentive Socrates. Such popular portrayals are intended largely to highlight what makes Socrates such an appealing character. But she also appears briefly in Plato’s dialogue the Phaedo, the dialogue that takes place in Socrates’s prison cell and recounts the conversation about death and immortality that took place there and then reports the events surrounding Socrates’s death after drinking the hemlock. After a review of the ancient anecdotes about Xanthippe and possible readings of those anecdotes, this chapter considers the significance of Xanthippe’s presence early in the Phaedo for our understanding of the conversation between Socrates and his companions. In this way, Xanthippe moves from the role of the shrew to—if not exactly a muse—at least a question mark. That we even know her name may indicate a force of personality too readily scorned by those highlighting her shrewish nature.