Hunter H Gardner
Pestilence and the Body Politic in Latin Literature
Hunter H Gardner
Pestilence and the Body Politic in Latin Literature
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Roman writers of the late Roman Republic and early Empire developed important conventions of the western plague narrative as a response to the destabilization of the body politic. This volume examines how they used largely fictive representations of epidemic disease to address the collapse of the social order and suggest remedies for its recovery.
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Roman writers of the late Roman Republic and early Empire developed important conventions of the western plague narrative as a response to the destabilization of the body politic. This volume examines how they used largely fictive representations of epidemic disease to address the collapse of the social order and suggest remedies for its recovery.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 316
- Erscheinungstermin: 11. September 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 219mm x 141mm x 27mm
- Gewicht: 526g
- ISBN-13: 9780198796428
- ISBN-10: 0198796420
- Artikelnr.: 56276046
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 316
- Erscheinungstermin: 11. September 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 219mm x 141mm x 27mm
- Gewicht: 526g
- ISBN-13: 9780198796428
- ISBN-10: 0198796420
- Artikelnr.: 56276046
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Hunter H. Gardner is Associate Professor of Classics and Comparative Literature at the University of South Carolina, where she teaches a wide range of courses on Greek, Latin, and the ancient Greco-Roman Mediterranean. She is the author of Gendering Time in Augustan Love Elegy (OUP, 2013) and co-editor of Odyssean Identities in Modern Cultures: The Journey Home (with Sheila Murnaghan; Ohio State University Press, 2014).
* Frontmatter
* List of Illustrations
* 0: Introduction
* PART 1: Tabula Rasa: A New Kind of Plague Narrative
* 1: Roman Pestilence: Tenor and Vehicle
* 1.1: Experiencing and observing epidemic disease in ancient Rome
* 1.2: Theorizing fictions of the end
* 1.3: Caveat: on the dangers of invoking plague discourse
* 2: Livy, Pestilentia, and the Pathologies of Class Strife
* 2.1: Plague and seditio of the fifth century
* 2.2: Pestilence and the lectisternium of 399 BCE
* 2.3: Plague and Rome's ludi scaenici
* PART 2: Experiments in Apocalyptic Thinking
* 3: Human and Civic Corpora in Lucretius' Treatment of the Athenian
Plague
* 3.1: Transgressing the threshold of death
* 3.2: Repetition, accumulation, and iterative mortality
* 3.3: Contending for "one's own": familial devotion and civic discord
* 3.4: Terminating the interminable: saecular and literary evolutions
* 4: Plague, Civil War, and Epochal Evolution in Vergil's Georgics
* 4.1: Plague and the (post-) apocalypse: inverting the ages in
Vergil's Noricum
* 4.2: Bees and the body politic
* 4.3: Coda: the Cretan plague of Aeneid 3
* 5: That Other Dream of Plague: Augustus' Novus Ordo and Ovid's Origin
of the Myrmidons
* 5.1: Noricum in Aegina: Ovid's Georgic plague
* 5.2: The ties that bind: familial bonds and the Aeginetan Plague
* 5.3: The old pietas of Aegina and the Augustan Principate
* 5.4: Toward a new kind of pietas
* 5.5: Ants as citizens: anticipating another dream of plague
* 5.6: No one wants a plague, of course: a chance to begin again
* 5.7: Coda: Metamorphoses 15
* PART 3: Transmitting Roman Plague
* 6: Imperial Receptions: Lucan, Seneca, and Silius Italicus
* 6.1: Lucan and the rabies of civil war
* 6.2: Quasi-plague and failed closure in Bellum Civile
* 6.3: Seneca's Oedipus
* 6.4: Refractions of a new order
* 6.5: Pro misera pietas!
* 6.6: Plague, individualism, and exemplary behavior in Silius
Italicus' Punica
* 7: Relapse: Transmitting Roman Plague in the West
* 7.1: Endelechius and Paulus: Christian visions of a New Jerusalem
* 7.2: Visions of chaos, manifestations of order: plague iconography in
the Italian Renaissance and beyond
* 7.3: A new order for homo sapiens? From biopolitics to bioengineering
in Anglo-American fiction
* 7.4: Epilogue
* Endmatter
* Bibliography
* Index
* List of Illustrations
* 0: Introduction
* PART 1: Tabula Rasa: A New Kind of Plague Narrative
* 1: Roman Pestilence: Tenor and Vehicle
* 1.1: Experiencing and observing epidemic disease in ancient Rome
* 1.2: Theorizing fictions of the end
* 1.3: Caveat: on the dangers of invoking plague discourse
* 2: Livy, Pestilentia, and the Pathologies of Class Strife
* 2.1: Plague and seditio of the fifth century
* 2.2: Pestilence and the lectisternium of 399 BCE
* 2.3: Plague and Rome's ludi scaenici
* PART 2: Experiments in Apocalyptic Thinking
* 3: Human and Civic Corpora in Lucretius' Treatment of the Athenian
Plague
* 3.1: Transgressing the threshold of death
* 3.2: Repetition, accumulation, and iterative mortality
* 3.3: Contending for "one's own": familial devotion and civic discord
* 3.4: Terminating the interminable: saecular and literary evolutions
* 4: Plague, Civil War, and Epochal Evolution in Vergil's Georgics
* 4.1: Plague and the (post-) apocalypse: inverting the ages in
Vergil's Noricum
* 4.2: Bees and the body politic
* 4.3: Coda: the Cretan plague of Aeneid 3
* 5: That Other Dream of Plague: Augustus' Novus Ordo and Ovid's Origin
of the Myrmidons
* 5.1: Noricum in Aegina: Ovid's Georgic plague
* 5.2: The ties that bind: familial bonds and the Aeginetan Plague
* 5.3: The old pietas of Aegina and the Augustan Principate
* 5.4: Toward a new kind of pietas
* 5.5: Ants as citizens: anticipating another dream of plague
* 5.6: No one wants a plague, of course: a chance to begin again
* 5.7: Coda: Metamorphoses 15
* PART 3: Transmitting Roman Plague
* 6: Imperial Receptions: Lucan, Seneca, and Silius Italicus
* 6.1: Lucan and the rabies of civil war
* 6.2: Quasi-plague and failed closure in Bellum Civile
* 6.3: Seneca's Oedipus
* 6.4: Refractions of a new order
* 6.5: Pro misera pietas!
* 6.6: Plague, individualism, and exemplary behavior in Silius
Italicus' Punica
* 7: Relapse: Transmitting Roman Plague in the West
* 7.1: Endelechius and Paulus: Christian visions of a New Jerusalem
* 7.2: Visions of chaos, manifestations of order: plague iconography in
the Italian Renaissance and beyond
* 7.3: A new order for homo sapiens? From biopolitics to bioengineering
in Anglo-American fiction
* 7.4: Epilogue
* Endmatter
* Bibliography
* Index
* Frontmatter
* List of Illustrations
* 0: Introduction
* PART 1: Tabula Rasa: A New Kind of Plague Narrative
* 1: Roman Pestilence: Tenor and Vehicle
* 1.1: Experiencing and observing epidemic disease in ancient Rome
* 1.2: Theorizing fictions of the end
* 1.3: Caveat: on the dangers of invoking plague discourse
* 2: Livy, Pestilentia, and the Pathologies of Class Strife
* 2.1: Plague and seditio of the fifth century
* 2.2: Pestilence and the lectisternium of 399 BCE
* 2.3: Plague and Rome's ludi scaenici
* PART 2: Experiments in Apocalyptic Thinking
* 3: Human and Civic Corpora in Lucretius' Treatment of the Athenian
Plague
* 3.1: Transgressing the threshold of death
* 3.2: Repetition, accumulation, and iterative mortality
* 3.3: Contending for "one's own": familial devotion and civic discord
* 3.4: Terminating the interminable: saecular and literary evolutions
* 4: Plague, Civil War, and Epochal Evolution in Vergil's Georgics
* 4.1: Plague and the (post-) apocalypse: inverting the ages in
Vergil's Noricum
* 4.2: Bees and the body politic
* 4.3: Coda: the Cretan plague of Aeneid 3
* 5: That Other Dream of Plague: Augustus' Novus Ordo and Ovid's Origin
of the Myrmidons
* 5.1: Noricum in Aegina: Ovid's Georgic plague
* 5.2: The ties that bind: familial bonds and the Aeginetan Plague
* 5.3: The old pietas of Aegina and the Augustan Principate
* 5.4: Toward a new kind of pietas
* 5.5: Ants as citizens: anticipating another dream of plague
* 5.6: No one wants a plague, of course: a chance to begin again
* 5.7: Coda: Metamorphoses 15
* PART 3: Transmitting Roman Plague
* 6: Imperial Receptions: Lucan, Seneca, and Silius Italicus
* 6.1: Lucan and the rabies of civil war
* 6.2: Quasi-plague and failed closure in Bellum Civile
* 6.3: Seneca's Oedipus
* 6.4: Refractions of a new order
* 6.5: Pro misera pietas!
* 6.6: Plague, individualism, and exemplary behavior in Silius
Italicus' Punica
* 7: Relapse: Transmitting Roman Plague in the West
* 7.1: Endelechius and Paulus: Christian visions of a New Jerusalem
* 7.2: Visions of chaos, manifestations of order: plague iconography in
the Italian Renaissance and beyond
* 7.3: A new order for homo sapiens? From biopolitics to bioengineering
in Anglo-American fiction
* 7.4: Epilogue
* Endmatter
* Bibliography
* Index
* List of Illustrations
* 0: Introduction
* PART 1: Tabula Rasa: A New Kind of Plague Narrative
* 1: Roman Pestilence: Tenor and Vehicle
* 1.1: Experiencing and observing epidemic disease in ancient Rome
* 1.2: Theorizing fictions of the end
* 1.3: Caveat: on the dangers of invoking plague discourse
* 2: Livy, Pestilentia, and the Pathologies of Class Strife
* 2.1: Plague and seditio of the fifth century
* 2.2: Pestilence and the lectisternium of 399 BCE
* 2.3: Plague and Rome's ludi scaenici
* PART 2: Experiments in Apocalyptic Thinking
* 3: Human and Civic Corpora in Lucretius' Treatment of the Athenian
Plague
* 3.1: Transgressing the threshold of death
* 3.2: Repetition, accumulation, and iterative mortality
* 3.3: Contending for "one's own": familial devotion and civic discord
* 3.4: Terminating the interminable: saecular and literary evolutions
* 4: Plague, Civil War, and Epochal Evolution in Vergil's Georgics
* 4.1: Plague and the (post-) apocalypse: inverting the ages in
Vergil's Noricum
* 4.2: Bees and the body politic
* 4.3: Coda: the Cretan plague of Aeneid 3
* 5: That Other Dream of Plague: Augustus' Novus Ordo and Ovid's Origin
of the Myrmidons
* 5.1: Noricum in Aegina: Ovid's Georgic plague
* 5.2: The ties that bind: familial bonds and the Aeginetan Plague
* 5.3: The old pietas of Aegina and the Augustan Principate
* 5.4: Toward a new kind of pietas
* 5.5: Ants as citizens: anticipating another dream of plague
* 5.6: No one wants a plague, of course: a chance to begin again
* 5.7: Coda: Metamorphoses 15
* PART 3: Transmitting Roman Plague
* 6: Imperial Receptions: Lucan, Seneca, and Silius Italicus
* 6.1: Lucan and the rabies of civil war
* 6.2: Quasi-plague and failed closure in Bellum Civile
* 6.3: Seneca's Oedipus
* 6.4: Refractions of a new order
* 6.5: Pro misera pietas!
* 6.6: Plague, individualism, and exemplary behavior in Silius
Italicus' Punica
* 7: Relapse: Transmitting Roman Plague in the West
* 7.1: Endelechius and Paulus: Christian visions of a New Jerusalem
* 7.2: Visions of chaos, manifestations of order: plague iconography in
the Italian Renaissance and beyond
* 7.3: A new order for homo sapiens? From biopolitics to bioengineering
in Anglo-American fiction
* 7.4: Epilogue
* Endmatter
* Bibliography
* Index