Martial's Rome
This provocative book is a major contribution to our understanding of Martial's poetics, his vision of the relationship between art and reality, and his role in formulating modern perceptions of Rome. The study shows how on every scale from the microscopic to the cosmic, Martial displays epigram's ambition to enact the sociality of urban life, but also to make Rome rise out of epigram's architecture and gestures. Martial's distinctive aesthetic, grounded in paradox and inconsistency, ensures that the humblest, most throwaway poetic form is best poised to capture first century empire in all its dazzling complexity. As well as investigating many of Martial's central themes - monumentality, economics, death, carnival, exile - this books also questions what kind of a mascot Martial is for classics today in our own advanced, multicultural world, and will be an invaluable guide for scholars and students of classical literature and Roman history.
- The first book in English to give a comprehensive account of Martial's poetics and attempt to define his aesthetic
- Contains detailed readings of six books by Martial, but also pursues a thematic approach
- Written in a lively style that brings Martial's rude and idiomatic wit to life
Product details
February 2009Adobe eBook Reader
9780511474453
0 pages
0kg
This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.
Table of Contents
- Introduction: getting to know Martial
- 1. Copyright and contagion: the city as text
- 2. Vigor Mortis: living and dying
- 3. Poetic economies: figuring out Martial's maths
- 4. Mundus inversus: Martial's Saturnalia
- 5. The space of epigram
- Epilogue.