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Suetonius the Biographer: Studies in Roman Lives

✍ Scribed by Tristan Power; Roy K. Gibson


Publisher
Oxford University Press, USA
Year
2014
Tongue
English
Leaves
351
Edition
New
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


The biographer Suetonius is one of the most fascinating writers of ancient Rome, but he is rarely afforded serious critical attention. This volume of new essays focuses on the various aspects of Suetonius' work, from his lost writing on Roman courtesans to his imperial portraits of the Caesars.

Beginning with an introduction that assesses the originality of Suetonius as a writer and situates the essays within the context of debates and controversies over his biographical form, the collection addresses the issues surrounding his style, themes, and early influence on literature in three parts. The first part discusses formal features of Suetonian biography, such as his literary techniques, manners of citation and quotation, and devices of allusion and closure. The middle section is devoted to readings of the individual Lives, treating several topics - from Suetonius' decision to begin his collection with Julius Caesar, to fictional elements in his death scene of the emperor Caligula, to the theme of solitude in his Life of Domitian. The last part examines the ways in which Suetonius transgresses the boundaries of ancient biography by looking at his influence on epistolographers, antiquarians, commentators, and later biographers.

This volume is essential reading for anyone who wants to know why Suetonius' Lives are such a unique and powerful medium for the stories of ancient Rome, and how they became the primary model for later biography.

✦ Table of Contents


Cover
Preface
Contents
List of Contributors
Editions and Abbreviations
Introduction: The Originality of Suetonius
Tristan Power
Part I
Formal Features
1. Suetonius’ Rubric Sandwich
Donna W. Hurley
2. Suetonius the Ventriloquist
Cynthia Damon
3. The Endings of Suetonius’ Caesars
Tristan Power
Part II Reading the Lives
4. Was Suetonius’ Julius a Caesar?
John Henderson
5. Exemplary Influences and Augustus’ Pernicious Moral Legacy
Rebecca Langlands
6. E.g. Augustus: exemplum in the Augustus and Tiberius
Erik Gunderson
7. Rhetorics of Assassination: Ironic Reversal and the Emperor Gaius
Donna W. Hurley
8. Another Look at Suetonius’ Titus
W. Jeffrey Tatum
9. The Mirror in the Text: Privacy, Performance, and the Power of Suetonius’ Domitian
Jean-Michel Hulls
Part III
Biographical Thresholds
10. Suetonius and the uiri illustres of Pliny the Younger
Roy K. Gibson
11. Suetonius’ Famous Courtesans
Tristan Power
12. Suetonius and the Origin of Pantomime
T. P. Wiseman
13. Suetonius and the De uita Caesarum in the Carolingian Empire
Jamie Wood
Bibliography
Index Locorum
General Index


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