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The Politics and Poetics of Cicero's Brutus : The Invention of Literary History (Revised edition)

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Cicero's Brutus (46 BCE), a tour-de-force of intellectual and political history, was written amidst political crisis: Caesar's defeat of the republican resistance at the battle of Thapsus.

This magisterial example of the dialogue genre capaciously documents the intellectual vibrancy of the Roman Republic and its Greco-Roman traditions.

This book studies the work from several distinct yet interrelated perspectives: Cicero's account of oratorical history, the confrontation with Caesar, and the exploration of what it means to write a history of an artistic practice.

Close readings of this dialogue-including its apparent contradictions and tendentious fabrications-reveal a crucial and crucially productive moment in Greco-Roman thought.

Cicero, this book argues, created the first nuanced, sophisticated, and ultimately 'modern' literary history, crafting both a compelling justification of Rome's oratorical traditions and also laying a foundation for literary historiography that abides to this day.

This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1009281356 / 9781009281355
Paperback / softback
875.01
20/07/2023
United Kingdom
English
308 pages
Previous edition: 2021.