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  1. The Emperor in the Roman World.T. Robert S. Broughton & Fergus Millar - 1978 - American Journal of Philology 99 (4):530.
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  • The Politics of Immorality in Ancient Rome.Catharine Edwards - 2002 - Cambridge University Press.
    The decadence and depravity of the ancient Romans are a commonplace of serious history, popular novels and spectacular films. This book is concerned not with the question of how immoral the ancient Romans were but why the literature they produced is so preoccupied with immorality. The modern image of immoral Rome derives from ancient accounts which are largely critical rather than celebratory. Upper-class Romans habitually accused one another of the most lurid sexual and sumptuary improprieties. Historians and moralists lamented the (...)
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  • How Societies Remember.Paul Connerton - 1989 - Cambridge University Press.
    Most studies of memory as a cultural faculty focus on written practices and how they are transmitted. This study concentrates on incorporated practices and provides an account of how these things are transmitted in and as traditions. The author argues that images and recollected knowledge of the past are conveyed and sustained by ritual performances, and that performative memory is bodily. This is an essential aspect of social memory that until now has been badly neglected.
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  • Morals and Villas in Seneca's Letters: Places to Dwell.John Henderson - 2007 - Cambridge University Press.
    John Henderson focuses on three key Letters visiting three Roman villas, and reveals their meaning as designs for contrasting lives. Seneca brings the philosophical epistle to Latin literature, creating models for moralizing which feature self-criticism, parody, and animated revision of myth. The Stoic moralist wrests writing away from Greek gurus and texts, and recasts it into critical thinking in Latin terms, within a Roman context. The Letters embody critical thinking on metaphor and translation, self-transformation and cultural tradition.
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  • ǂa ǂcommentary on Livy, Books Vi-X.: Introduction and Book Vi.S. P. Oakley - 1997 - Oxford University Press UK.
    Books VI-X of Livy's history of Rome describe the beginnings of Rome's conquest of Italy in the fourth century BC and contain some of Livy's finest writing. This is the first full-scale, scholarly commentary to be written on this part of the history in modern times. The first of three volumes, this book contains an extensive introduction and the commentary to Book VI. The introduction provides a full analysis of the Roman annalistic tradition, of Livy's style and narrative technique, and (...)
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  • Marked and unmarked: A choice between unequals in semiotic structure.Linda R. Waugh - 1982 - Semiotica 38 (3-4).
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  • The Time That Remains: A Commentary on the Letter to the Romans.Giorgio Agamben - 2005 - Stanford University Press.
    In The Time That Remains, Agamben seeks to separate the Pauline texts from the history of the Church that canonized them, thus revealing them to be "the fundamental messianic texts of the West.
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  • Storia dei Romani.J. F. Gilliam & Gaetano de Sanctis - 1959 - American Journal of Philology 80 (2):204.
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  • Divus Julius.G. V. Sumner & Stefan Weinstock - 1974 - American Journal of Philology 95 (3):304.
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  • The Latin Cognomina.Hans Petersen & Iiro Kajanto - 1967 - American Journal of Philology 88 (3):356.
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  • Cicero: Ein biographischer Versuch.Erich S. Gruen & Matthias Gelzer - 1970 - American Journal of Philology 91 (2):233.
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  • Soziale Bedingungen des kulturellen Vergessens.Egon Flaig - 1999 - In Vorträge Aus Dem Warburg-Haus, Band 3. Akademie Verlag. pp. 31-100.
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