Unwritten Rome
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Unwritten Rome
University of Exeter Press, 2008
- : hard
- : pbk.
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Note
Bibliography: p. [321]-343
Includes indexes
Description and Table of Contents
Description
In Unwritten Rome, a new book by the author of Myths of Rome, T.P. Wiseman presents us with an imaginative and appealing picture of the early society of pre-literary Rome-as a free and uninhibited world in which the arts and popular entertainments flourished. This original angle allows the voice of the Roman people to be retrieved empathetically from contemporary artefacts and figured monuments, and from selected passages of later literature.How do you understand a society that didn't write down its own history? That is the problem with early Rome, from the Bronze Age down to the conquest of Italy around 300 BC. The texts we have to use were all written centuries later, and their view of early Rome is impossibly anachronistic. But some possibly authentic evidence may survive, if we can only tease it out - like the old story of a Roman king acting as a magician, or the traditional custom that may originate in the practice of ritual prostitution. This book consists of eighteen attempts to find such material and make sense of it.
Table of Contents
1. Unwritten Rome
2. What Can Livy Tell Us?
3. Fauns, Prophets and Ennius' Annales
4. The God of the Lupercal
5. Liber: Myth, Drama and Ideology in Republican Rome
6. The Kalends of April
7. Summoning Jupiter: Magic in the Roman Republic
8. Origines ludorum
9. The Games of Flora
10. The Games of Hercules
11. Praetextae, Togatae and Other Unhelpful Categories
12. Octavia and the Phantom Genre
13. Ovid and the Stage
14. The Prehistory of Roman Historiography
15. History, Poetry and Annales
16. The House of Tarquin
17. The Legend of Lucius Brutus
18. Roman Republic, Year One
Bibliography
Index
by "Nielsen BookData"