Slavery and the Roman Literary Imagination ( Roman Literature and its Contexts )

Publication series :Roman Literature and its Contexts

Author: William Fitzgerald  

Publisher: Cambridge University Press‎

Publication year: 2000

E-ISBN: 9780511034039

P-ISBN(Paperback): 9780521779692

Subject: I106 the classics and study

Keyword: 作品评论和研究

Language: ENG

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Slavery and the Roman Literary Imagination

Description

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.

Chapter

Introduction: living with slaves

Living with contradiction

Slavery and literature

CHAPTER 1. The other self: proximity and symbiosis

CHAPTER 2. Punishment: license, (self-) control and fantasy

The slave’s license

Love and shaving

CHAPTER 3. Slaves between the free

Slaves and guests

Paedagogus and whipping-boy

Fall guys and alibis

Go-betweens: Ovid, Amores 1.11 and 12.

The go-between as substitute: Amores 2.7 and 8

CHAPTER 4. The continuum of (servile) relationships

“Servile” social relations

Family and slavery

CHAPTER 5. Enslavement and metamorphosis

From slave to free

From free to slave

Enslavement, servitude and the novel

The Golden Ass and the alienated body

Animals and slaves

Curiosity and “slavishness”

From maid to goddess

Slave ofthe deity: from Isis to Jesus

Epilogue

Bibliography

General index

Index of passages discussed

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