THE GHOSTS OF THE PAST: LATIN LITERATURE, THE DEAD, AND ROME'S TRANSITION TO A PRINCIPATE

THE GHOSTS OF THE PAST: LATIN LITERATURE, THE DEAD, AND ROME'S TRANSITION TO A PRINCIPATE

by BASIL DUFALLO
THE GHOSTS OF THE PAST: LATIN LITERATURE, THE DEAD, AND ROME'S TRANSITION TO A PRINCIPATE

THE GHOSTS OF THE PAST: LATIN LITERATURE, THE DEAD, AND ROME'S TRANSITION TO A PRINCIPATE

by BASIL DUFALLO

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Overview

The ancient Romans quite literally surrounded themselves with the dead: masks of the dead were in the atria of their houses, funerals paraded through their main marketplace, and tombs lined the roads leading into and out of the city. In Roman literature as well, the dead occupy a prominent place, indicating a close and complex relationship between literature and society. The evocation of the dead in the Latin authors of the first century BCE both responds and contributes to changing socio-political conditions during the transition from the Republic to the Empire.
 
To understand the literary life of the Roman dead, The Ghosts of the Past develops a new perspective on Latin literature’s interaction with Roman culture. Drawing on the insights of sociology, anthropology, and performance theory, Basil Dufallo argues that authors of the late Republic and early Principate engage strategically with Roman behaviors centered on the dead and their world in order to address urgent political and social concerns. Republican literature exploits this context for the ends of political competition among the clan-based Roman elite, while early imperial literature seeks to restage the republican practices for a reformed Augustan society.

Calling into question boundaries of genre and literary form, Dufallo’s study will revise current understandings of Latin literature as a cultural and performance practice. Works as diverse as Cicero’s speeches, Propertian elegy, Horace’s epodes and satires, and Vergil’s Aeneid appear in a new light as performed texts interacting with other kinds of cultural performance from which they might otherwise seem isolated.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780814256268
Publisher: Ohio State University Press
Publication date: 01/29/2021
Pages: 188
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.50(d)

About the Author

Basil Dufallo is assistant professor of Greek and Latin and comparative literature at the University of Michigan.

Table of Contents

List of Abbreviations ix

Acknowledgments xi

Introduction The Dead as the Living 1

Chapter 1 Oratory and Magic in Republican Rome 13

Chapter 2 Domesticae Furiae: Cicero's Tragic Universe 36

Chapter 3 The Second Philippic as Cultural Resistance 53

Chapter 4 Propertian Elegy as "Restored Behavior" 74

Chapter 5 Vergil's Alternatives to Republican Performance 99

Conclusion The Living as the Dead 123

Notes 129

Works Cited 155

Index Locorum 167

General Index 171

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