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Slavery and the Roman Literary Imagination William Fitzgerald (University of Cambridge)

Slavery and the Roman Literary Imagination By William Fitzgerald (University of Cambridge)

Slavery and the Roman Literary Imagination by William Fitzgerald (University of Cambridge)


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Summary

This book deals with the ways in which the Roman literary imagination explored the phenomenon of slavery. It discusses the ideological relation of Roman literature to the institution of slavery, and the ways in which slavery provided a metaphor for other relationships and experiences, and in particular for literature itself.

Slavery and the Roman Literary Imagination Summary

Slavery and the Roman Literary Imagination by William Fitzgerald (University of Cambridge)

This book explores the presence of slaves and slavery in Roman literature and asks particularly what the free imagination made of the experience of living with slaves, beings who both were and were not fellow humans. As a shadow humanity, slaves furnished the free with other selves and imaginative alibis as well as mediators between and substitutes for their peers. As presences that witnessed their owners' most unguarded moments they possessed a knowledge that was the object of both curiosity and anxiety. The book discusses not only the ideological relations of Roman literature to the institution of slavery, but also the ways in which slavery provided a metaphor for a range of other relationships and experiences, and in particular for literature itself. It is arranged thematically and covers a broad chronological and generic field.

Slavery and the Roman Literary Imagination Reviews

'A supple and mature enquiry into an impossibly all-encompassing topic ... the literary imagination on display in this little book packs in incisive laceration along with clear-cut analysis.' Journal of Roman Studies
'In short, an attractive and provocative work. In the estimate of the reviewer, it is one of the best in an outstanding series that has already established itself as an essential part of modern Latin studies.' Brent Shaw, Phoenix 55

Table of Contents

Introduction; 1. The other self: proximity and symbiosis; 2. Punishment: license, (self-) control and fantasy; 3. Slaves between the free; 4. Slavery and the continuum of (servile) relationships; 5. Enslavement and metamorphosis; Epilogue.

Additional information

NLS9780521779692
9780521779692
0521779693
Slavery and the Roman Literary Imagination by William Fitzgerald (University of Cambridge)
New
Paperback
Cambridge University Press
2000-03-09
142
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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