Emotion, Restraint, and Community in Ancient Rome

Emotion, Restraint, and Community in Ancient Rome

by Robert Kaster
Emotion, Restraint, and Community in Ancient Rome

Emotion, Restraint, and Community in Ancient Rome

by Robert Kaster

eBook

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Overview

Classical Culture and Society (Series Editors: Joseph A. Farrell, University of Pennsylvania, and Ian Morris, Stanford University) is a new series from Oxford that emphasizes innovative, imaginative scholarship by leading scholars in the field of ancient culture. Among the topics covered will be the historical and cultural background of Greek and Roman literary texts; the production and reception of cultural artifacts; the economic basis of culture; the history of ideas, values, and concepts; and the relationship between politics and/or social practice and ancient forms of symbolic expression (religion, art, language, and ritual, among others). Interdisciplinary approaches and original, broad-ranging research form the backbone of this series, which will serve classicists as well as appealing to scholars and educated readers in related fields. Emotion, Restraint, and Community examines the ways in w hich emotions, and talk about emotions, interacted with the ethics of the Roman upper classes in the late Republic and early Empire. By considering how various Roman forms of fear, dismay, indignation, and revulsion created an economy of displeasure that shaped society in constructive ways, the book casts new light both on the Romans and on cross-cultural understanding of emotions.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780198032274
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 07/21/2005
Series: Classical Culture and Society
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 461 KB

About the Author


Robert A. Kaster is Professor of Classics and Kennedy Foundation Professor of Latin at Princeton University.

Table of Contents

PrefaceIntroduction1.. Between Respect and Shame: Verecundia and the Art of Social Worry2.. Fifty Ways to Feel your Pudor3.. The Structure of Paenitentia and the Egoism of Regret4.. Invidia is One Thing, Invidia Quite Another5.. The Dynamics of Fastidium and the Ideology ofDisgust6.. Epilogue —Being "Wholly" Roman
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