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Writing Imperial History: Tacitus from Agricola to Annales

Autor Bram L.H. ten Berge
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 8 aug 2023
The late first- and early second-century Roman senator and historian Cornelius Tacitus, whom Edward Gibbon described as “the first of the historians who applied the science of philosophy to the study of facts,” shaped the development of the modern understanding of history as a crucial vehicle for social analysis. The breadth of his thinking is fully revealed only through analysis of how the political, geographical, and rhetorical theories expounded in his early works influenced his later narrative of the evolution of the Roman monarchy. Tacitus, who was one of the oratorical luminaries of his time, produced a collection of works widely recognized as offering the most authoritative account of Rome’s early imperial history. His oeuvre traditionally is divided into the so-called minor and major works. Writing Imperial History offers the first comprehensive analysis of Tacitus’ five texts and their interconnections and serves to confront longstanding assumptions that have led to a fundamental misunderstanding of the nature and development of his oeuvre and historical thinking. Tracing many of the enduring themes and concerns that Tacitus explores across his works, the book shows how the vision articulated in his earlier texts persists in his later ones and how he used the former as sources for the latter.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780472133437
ISBN-10: 0472133438
Pagini: 424
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 33 mm
Greutate: 0.65 kg
Editura: UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN PRESS
Colecția University of Michigan Press

Notă biografică

Bram L. H. ten Berge is Assistant Professor of Classics at Hope College. He specializes in Roman history and historiography (especially Tacitus).

Cuprins

Acknowledgements
A Note on the Text

Introduction                                            
Preliminary Remarks: Some Background      
                  
CHAPTER 1: The Agricola: Enunciating Tacitean Concerns and Techniques      
CHAPTER 2: The Agricola and the Germania as Companion Pieces    
CHAPTER 3: The Dialogus de Oratoribus: Rehabilitating the "Anomaly"
CHAPTER 4: The Historiae: Biography, Ethnography, and Dialogue as Sources for Historiographical Narrative             
CHAPTER 5: The Annales: Finalizing an Integrated Project            
Epilogue                                     

Bibliography
Index Locorum

 

Recenzii

“The author’s writing is clear and straightforward, and his knowledge of Tacitean scholarship is also impressive. Overall, the book is peppered with interesting insights. Ten Berge is a diligent and careful scholar.”
"By moving with ease from the micro (analysis of textual networks) to the macro level (study of Tacitus' ideological thought), ten Berge succeeds in demonstrating the subtlety and unity of a pessimistic but pragmatic view of the imperial regime, whose development in the first century CE had definitively swept away the illusions born after Actium."
"...ten Berge is to be congratulated for encouraging us to rethink the silos to which Tacitus' individual works have long been consigned. He is a careful writer with a good command of the bibliography, and his intertextual approach will surely inspire future research by other readers of Rome's greatest historian."
"This book is undoubtedly a first-rate contribution to the study of Tacitus, and more generally of Roman historical thinking. Those who are looking for an impressively well-informed and remarkably measured introduction to Tacitus, steeped in the careful engagement with the complex history of the scholarship on this author, will find invaluable guidance here."
"While individual conclusions about Tacitus' view of the principate and empire may not come as much of a surprise to those familiar with Tacitus' work, the strength of the book lies in how it conclusively demonstrates how these themes are central to the understanding of every work."
"Ten Berge has produced a learned and insightful book that should shift the conversation on Tacitus from specific themes that appeal particularly to the present moment to a fuller and more complicated understanding of the concerns of the entire corpus."

Descriere

Analyzes how Tacitus contributed to our current understanding of history and reveals the themes that permeated his writing