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The Cambridge companion to the Roman historians [electronic resource] / edited by Andrew Feldherr.

Contributor Feldherr, Andrew, 1963- editor.

ImprintCambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2009.

Description1 online resource (xviii, 464 pages) : digital, PDF file(s).

Note:Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 09 Nov 2015).

Note:Introduction / Andrew Feldherr -- Ancient audiences and expectations / John Marincola -- Postmodern historiographical theory and the Roman historians / William W. Batstone -- Historians without history : against Roman historiography / J.E. Lendon -- Alternatives to written history in Republican Rome / Harriet I. Flower -- Roman historians and the Greeks : audiences and models / John Dillery -- Cato's Origines : the historian and his enemies / Ulrich Gotter -- Polybius / James Davidson -- Time / Denis Feeney -- Space / Andrew M. Riggsby -- Religion in historiography / Jason Davies -- Virtue and violence : the historians on politics / Joy Connolly -- The rhetoric of Roman historiography / Andrew Laird -- The exemplary past in Roman historiography and culture / Matthew Roller -- Intertextuality and historiography / Ellen O'Gorman -- Characterization and complexity : Caesar, Sallust, and Livy / Ann Vasaly -- Representing the emperor / Caroline Vout -- Women in Roman historiography / Kristina Milnor -- Barbarians I : Quintus Curtius' and other Roman historians' reception of Alexander / Elizabeth Baynham -- Barbarians II : Tacitus' Jews / Andrew Feldherr -- Josephus / Honora Chapman -- The Roman exempla tradition in imperial Greek historiography : the case of Camillus / Alain M. Gowing -- Ammianus Marcellinus : Tacitus' heir and Gibbon's guide / Gavin Kelly -- Ancient Roman historians and early modern political theory / Benedetto Fontana -- Re-writing history for the early modern stage : Racine's Roman tragedies / Volker Schroder -- The Roman historians and twentieth-century approaches to Roman history / Emma Dench.

Note:No field of Latin literature has been more transformed over the last couple of decades than that of the Roman historians. Narratology, a new receptiveness to intertextuality, and a re-thinking of the relationship between literature and its political contexts have ensured that the works of historians such as Livy, Sallust, and Tacitus will be read as texts with the same interest and sophistication as they are used as sources. In this book, topics central to the entire tradition, such as conceptions of time, characterization, and depictions of politics and the gods, are treated synoptically, while other essays highlight the works of less familiar historians, such as Curtius Rufus and Ammianus Marcellinus. A final section focuses on the rich reception history of Roman historiography, from the ancient Greek historians of Rome to the twentieth century. An appendix offers a chronological list of the ancient historians of Rome.

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Contributor
Feldherr, Andrew, 1963- editor.
Series Statement
Cambridge companions to literature
Subject:
Historiography -- Rome.
Historians -- Rome -- Biography.
Rome -- Historiography.
Rome -- History.
Series Added Entry-Uniform title
Cambridge companions to literature.