A COMPANION TO PERSIUS AND JUVENAL (original) (raw)
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A Companion to the Classical Tradition
2007
This series provides sophisticated and authoritative overviews of periods of ancient history, genres of classical literature, and the most important themes in ancient culture. Each volume comprises between twenty-five and forty concise essays written by individual scholars within their area of specialization. The essays are written in a clear, provocative, and lively manner, designed for an international audience of scholars, students, and general readers.
In this volume thirty new studies have been specially commissioned from scholars in seven countries to treat key texts and cultural phenomena from the Homeric age to the medieval period. A wide variety of critical approaches are employed to challenge orthodoxies and to present fresh perspectives on the literature, art and history of classical antiquity, late antiquity and the middle ages. Attractive features of the volume include the treatment of newly emerging areas of inquiry in addition to canonical texts and the representation of views of established international scholars at the forefront of the discipline. A recurrent motif of the volume emerges in the interpretive benefits of combining philological acumen with theoretical and intertextual considerations. This accessible and provocative book will be of interest to classicists, historians, art historians, students of comparative literature, and anyone concerned with the immense cultural legacy of classical Mediterranean civilisation. Greek and Latin quotations are accompanied by translations throughout.
A Companion to Greek Mythology
This series provides sophisticated and authoritative overviews of periods of ancient history, genres of classical literature, and the most important themes in ancient culture. Each volume comprises between twentyfive and forty concise essays written by individual scholars within their area of specialization. The essays are written in a clear, provocative, and lively manner, designed for an international audience of scholars, students, and general readers.
Domus Aurea Essay on Ancient Literary Sources 24 07 15
This text has a complex scholarly history. Although it has never been published, it has in fact been subject to proper scholarly peer review. It started out as Chapter 1 in my manuscript for what ultimately became my book The Domus Aurea and the Roman Architectural Revolution, (Cambridge University Press, 2003). The title below was simply the title for Chapter 1, with the elimination of "Chapter 1" being the only modification throughout this text. The MS, including this chapter, passed CUP peer review, passed muster with the NYC office of CUP and was then sent to the CUP syndicate in Cambridge for final approval. Their acceptance of the project, including this chapter, stipulated a substantial reduction in overall wording and illustration, however. To meet the required standard, this chapter on literary sources was deleted entirely, and it has sat in my computer as a relic ever since. Posting this text here does not in any way represent an imprimatur of approval by CUP for this stand-alone publication. The text is posted here entirely on my initiative, on the hope that someone in the field might find it useful. Since my own scholarly focus has shifted to Pompeii in the meantime, I have not given this text any thought or editing since 2003. As with houses for sale, used cars and fine critters at the local Humane Society, it is provided "As Is", for anyone to whom it may appeal.-LFB.
1. Katherine Prouting (The University of Queensland) Physical and Sexual Abuse in Athenian Lawcourt Speeches Domestic violence is a common topic in Athenian literature. Often writers or speakers introduced it to emphasise didactic statements or as a way to continue a story’s narrative. However, unlike other genres of Athenian literature, the analysis of domestic violence in Athenian legal speeches is underdeveloped. Domestic violence involves a person perpetrating acts against a victim in which there is a relationship. These acts are often categorised as physical abuse, such as hitting, slapping and kicking, and as sexual abuse, such as rape and non-consensual sexual acts. The Athenians responded to these complex phenomena through the overt and covert use of legal procedures. The latter provided a legal and rhetorical way to examine domestic violence. These procedures could deal directly with alleged domestic violence (e.g. the trauma ek poronias) or indirectly, as was the case with the dokimasia tōn rhētērōn (‘public scrutiny of speakers’). In this paper, I shall discuss how the Athenians used forensic speeches to discuss physical and sexual abuse, while contextualising these behaviours through modern studies of domestic violence that are applicable to the world of classical Athens. 2. Dr Kit Morrell (The University of Queensland) Talking about Laws in the Roman Republic Roman public discourse typically privileged tradition over innovation: ‘let no innovation be made contrary to the precedents and customs of the ancestors’, as Cicero put it in Pro Lege Manilia (60), summing up his opponents’ views. Yet, Roman lawmakers frequently did introduce significant innovations. The language of making and naming laws also suggests an attitude to innovation different from the rhetoric of mos maiorum (‘ancestral custom’). A vote in favour of a proposed law was precisely a vote for change: uti rogas (‘as you ask’), abbreviated to V on the voting tablet, as opposed to A for antiquo (‘I maintain things as they are’). Roman statutes were named for their proposers (lex Acilia, lex Julia, etc.), and it was a source of prestige to give one’s name to a new law. Even the inclusion of a so-called sanctio clause to try to prevent the repeal of a law anticipated further legislation in the future. This paper will consider what Roman ways of speaking and writing about laws might tell us about attitudes to lawmaking and innovation in the Roman republic. 3. Associate Professor Anne-Sophie Noel (École Normale Supérieure de Lyon/HiSoMA) What Can We Do with Objects in Greek Theatre? From Performance Studies to Thing Studies Material objects are now a well-established research topic in Greek tragedy. In the past decade, the most remarkable critical turn has been a shift from a performance-oriented interest to an ontological questioning. While the first generation of scholars investigated how objects participated, sometimes crucially, in the performance of Greek tragedy, the current generation is more interested in the ontology of objects, namely the set of defining properties that characterise their being in ancient plays, and, more widely, how non-human and human beings coexist in the ancient tragic Weltanschauung. This shift raises epistemological questions that have not been explicitly formulated. Moreover, a response to these ontological debates on the ‘life’ of objects has been to absorb and apply new theories: posthumanism and new materialisms are now deployed as new heuristic tools broadening classicists’s range of interpretative strategies. However, through a critical reading of Jane Bennett’s acclaimed 2010 opus, Vibrant Matter, I show how radical new materialist ideas – advocating for the non-human turn – clash with ancient Greek culture. The ancient, tragic materialism indeed grants a relational existence to objects, entangled with human bodies, emotions and cognition. 4. Lucile Myers (The University of Queensland) Celebrating the Transgressive: Charles Townley and the Collection of Intersex Sculptures in Eighteenth-Century Britain Few figures dominate the collection of antiquities in England in the eighteenth century like Charles Townley. Over the course of three tours of Italy, Townley and his agents acquired some of the most significant Graeco-Roman sculptures to enter Britain. Today, the Townley Marbles form an important part of the Greek and Roman Department of the British Museum. This paper focusses on one type of sculptures collected by Townley, namely his collection of sculptures of Hermaphroditus and other intersex divinities. These works included a recumbent nursing intersex sculpture, an ancient well-head decorated with scenes of sexual conquest, including the rape of an intersex youth, and a carved marble herm. I will detail what we know about the nature, provenance and acquisition of these sculptures. My paper also discusses the reasons for Townley’s collecting of them and the nature of their display in his collection. It contrasts his display practices with his contemporaries. Unlike other collectors, Townley did not attempt to minimise or hide the transgressive nature of this material. Instead, he used these sculptures as part of his own self-presentation to show his morally liberal leanings. In examining this aspect of Townley’s use of intersex sculptures, we can see the way in which the ancient world could be used to make explicit and validate non-normative moral positions. 5. Justin Pigott (The University of Auckland) “These Heaven-Bound Dung Beetles”: Late Roman Attitudes towards Slaves Entering the Clergy The fourth-century theologian Gregory of Nazianzus considered the entry of slaves and freedmen into the clergy as debasing the church, calling bishops drawn from slave stock ‘heaven-bound dung beetles’. Such sentiments were shared by the broader church hierarchy and imperial government of the day with council canons, episcopal rescripts and imperial laws all prohibiting the ordination of slaves. However, despite these proscriptions, the ordination of slaves was widespread. Indeed, on more than one occasion we find Gregory himself ordaining slaves. That we find such inconsistency is unsurprising. The act of slave ordination struck at the heart of tensions between traditional Roman social practice and the emerging Christian institution. By exploring the nature of such tensions, the post-Constantinian church’s opposition to slave ordination and the drivers that led men such as Gregory to ignore its prohibition, this paper seeks to provide fresh insight into the social contours of Christianisation. 6. Dr David Rafferty (The University of Adelaide) Revisiting Christian Meier’s Res Publica Amissa Christian Meier’s Res Publica Amissa, and especially the long introduction to its second edition of 1980, is the most theoretically sophisticated explanation of the collapse of the Roman republic that we possess. Yet, the book has not been translated into English and has made relatively little impact on Anglophone scholarship. It has belatedly become influential in German scholarship and has been a starting point for much of the recent work on Rome’s political culture. This paper will explore what we can gain from Meier’s work in the light of fifty years of detailed scholarship on the republic and recent work in Political Science that is theoretically similar. The simple concept of ‘crisis without alternative’ is only one of the riches that Meier’s approach offers. 7. Edward L’Orange (The University of Queensland) Far from Conservative: Athenian Religious Change in the Fifth Century BC Cleisthenes’s democratic reforms after 508/7 had a huge impact upon many aspects of Athenian politics and society. However, religion in Athens has often been viewed as a matter quite separate from the sphere of politics, with the common view being that the democratic revolution hardly affected polis-level religion at all. Students of the great Geoffrey de Sainte Croix – notably Robert Parker and Emily Kearns – have spearheaded this view, arguing that any religious changes brought about by Cleisthenes were conservative changes, simply continuing existing trends in state religion. According to their view, religious changes seen in the fifth century BC were a result, not so much of democracy, but of a natural progression in religious practice. This paper directly challenges this view of Athenian religious history. I will demonstrate that the reforms of Cleisthenes led to changes to polis religion that can be described only as rapid and quite profound. In little more than fifty years, Athenian democracy demonstrably changed the traditional priesthood and cult personnel as well as the financing of, and the participation in, religious cults and festivals. It also introduced state-based control systems into deme cults, and democratic ideals into distinctly religious settings. The reforms of Cleisthenes were thus a watershed in the history of Athenian polis religion.
ANCIENT NARRATIVE Supplementum 23
2020
of a large audience of students and colleagues. I am indebted to all for coming to the event and for contributing to the informative discussion-sessions. The chapters comprising this volume are revised versions of most of the papers which were delivered at the conference. I would like to thank Michael Paschalis and Costas Panayotakis for our cooperation in the publication of this volume, and also our publisher, Roelf Barkhuis, for producing-yet again-a splendid Ancient Narrative Supplementum. Stelios Panayotakis Calasiris as a 'servus callidus', 134 death of-, 136 Callirhoe as a tragic heroine, 28 elite status of-, 7, 41 Callirhoe and Artaxates, 48 Callirhoe and Dionysius, 40 Callirhoe and Plangon, 44, 128 Callirhoe enslaved not a 'real' slave, 40 capillatus, 192 captivity ~ slavery,
Ancient History Bulletin Review Sources et modèles des historiens anciens.
AHBOnlineReviews2022.07.DiepenbroekOnDevillerBattistinSebastian, 2022
In 2018 Devillier and Battistin Sebastiani published Sources et modèles des historiens anciens. The work was the result of a broad international collaboration which brought together 28 chapters by specialists in their field. Its chief aim was to provide a contribution to the studies on the writing of history in Greco-Roman antiquity from Herodotus to the Byzantine Empire. Through surveys devoted to the main historians and historical texts of this period, these different texts give rise to re-readings that take into account the historiographical projects of each. Only three years later in 2021, a second volume (Sources et modèles des historiens anciens 2) followed, containing thirty five chapters, which continues where the first volume left off. Both volumes, which are multilingual (English, French, German, Italian, Spanish) are excellent additions to the field of writing history in antiquity, because of the great variety of subjects discussed (from Herodotus to the Byzantine empire and Greek as well as Roman topics).