Description

Book Synopsis
He demonstrates a significant point of contact between two writers generally thought to be antagonists-the idea that imperial speech structures reveal the self.

Trade Review
This [review] can hardly do justice to the scope and richness of Star's argument in each chapter, to the thoroughness with which he discusses his chosen texts, and to the creativity with which he exploits his simultaneous treatments of Seneca and Petronius. This book makes a major contribution to the modern bibliography of selfhood and self-formation in the early empire, and it will doubtless generate further debate in so vibrant an area of study. -- Gareth Williams Classical Journal With this book, Star contributes to a growing body of scholarship on the construction of the self in classical antiquity. Choice If this book only managed to demonstrate -- as it unquestionably does -- the complementary intertexuality of the Satyricon with Senecan philosophy, that alone would be a noteworthy achievement. But in fact The Empire of the Self is rife with compelling readings of its target texts that have ramifications beyond a narrow understanding of either author of their relationship to one another. Star's study offers its readers valuable insights into the governing metaphors and preoccupations of the Roman intelligentsia in the mid-first century CE. -- Amanda Wilcox Bryn Mawr Classical Review Star has performed a valuable service in presenting a fresh approach to familiar authors which helps the discussion to move beyond some of the established academic truisms of the last few decades, and identifying the common conceptual ground that they share. He offers us a fresh perspective on both Seneca's and Petronius' views of self-fashioning, making a major contribution to several recent areas of interest within classics. Both graduate students and scholars working on Neronian literature or Roman concepts of identity will benefit from reading Star's argument. Hermathena

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part I: Soul-Shaping Speech
1. Senecan Philosophy and the Psychology of Command
2. Self-Address in Senecan Tragedy
3. Self-Address in the Satyricon
Part II: Soul-Revealing Speech
4. Political Speech in Declementia
5. Soul, Speech, and Politics in the Apocolocyntosisand the Satyricon
6. Writing, Body, and Money
Epilogue
Notes
Bibliography
Index

The Empire of the Self

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    A Hardback by Christopher Star

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      Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
      Publication Date: 26/01/2013
      ISBN13: 9781421406749, 978-1421406749
      ISBN10: 1421406748

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      He demonstrates a significant point of contact between two writers generally thought to be antagonists-the idea that imperial speech structures reveal the self.

      Trade Review
      This [review] can hardly do justice to the scope and richness of Star's argument in each chapter, to the thoroughness with which he discusses his chosen texts, and to the creativity with which he exploits his simultaneous treatments of Seneca and Petronius. This book makes a major contribution to the modern bibliography of selfhood and self-formation in the early empire, and it will doubtless generate further debate in so vibrant an area of study. -- Gareth Williams Classical Journal With this book, Star contributes to a growing body of scholarship on the construction of the self in classical antiquity. Choice If this book only managed to demonstrate -- as it unquestionably does -- the complementary intertexuality of the Satyricon with Senecan philosophy, that alone would be a noteworthy achievement. But in fact The Empire of the Self is rife with compelling readings of its target texts that have ramifications beyond a narrow understanding of either author of their relationship to one another. Star's study offers its readers valuable insights into the governing metaphors and preoccupations of the Roman intelligentsia in the mid-first century CE. -- Amanda Wilcox Bryn Mawr Classical Review Star has performed a valuable service in presenting a fresh approach to familiar authors which helps the discussion to move beyond some of the established academic truisms of the last few decades, and identifying the common conceptual ground that they share. He offers us a fresh perspective on both Seneca's and Petronius' views of self-fashioning, making a major contribution to several recent areas of interest within classics. Both graduate students and scholars working on Neronian literature or Roman concepts of identity will benefit from reading Star's argument. Hermathena

      Table of Contents

      Acknowledgments
      Introduction
      Part I: Soul-Shaping Speech
      1. Senecan Philosophy and the Psychology of Command
      2. Self-Address in Senecan Tragedy
      3. Self-Address in the Satyricon
      Part II: Soul-Revealing Speech
      4. Political Speech in Declementia
      5. Soul, Speech, and Politics in the Apocolocyntosisand the Satyricon
      6. Writing, Body, and Money
      Epilogue
      Notes
      Bibliography
      Index

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