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Satires of Rome: threatening poses from Lucilius to Juvenal

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This survey of Roman satire locates its most salient possibilities and effects at the center of every Roman reader's cultural and political self-understanding.

This book describes the genre's numerous shifts in focus and tone over several centuries (from Lucilius to Juvenal) not as mere 'generic adjustments' that reflect the personal preferences of its authors, but as separate chapters in a special, generically encoded story of Rome's lost, and much lionized, Republican identity.

Freedom exists in performance in ancient Rome: it is a 'spoken' entity.

As a result, satire's programmatic shifts, from 'open' to 'understated' to 'cryptic' and so on, can never be purely 'literary' and 'apolitical' in focus and/or tone.

In Satires of Rome, Professor Freudenburg reads these shifts as the genre's unique way of staging and agonizing over a crisis in Roman identity.

Satire's standard 'genre question' in this book becomes a question of the Roman self.

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£110.00
Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1107123402 / 9781107123403
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
25/10/2001
England
English
285 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%