A Noble Ruin: Mark Antony, Civil War, and the Collapse of the Roman Republic
Autor W. Jeffrey Tatumen Limba Engleză Hardback – 29 feb 2024
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780197694909
ISBN-10: 019769490X
Pagini: 496
Dimensiuni: 224 x 160 x 56 mm
Greutate: 0.84 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 019769490X
Pagini: 496
Dimensiuni: 224 x 160 x 56 mm
Greutate: 0.84 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
Tatum's deep knowledge of this complex period and the personalities who shaped it is apparent, and one of his great strengths is his ability to view events through the prism of the moment rather than the distorting lens of later history. There can be no doubt that his masterly treatment will be valued by scholars.
With his trademark brilliance in making sense of partial and often highly vituperative classical sources, Tatum gives us a nuanced and wonderfully readable portrait of a man whom he describes as a 'kind of guilty pleasure.'
As Caesar's right-hand man and Cleopatra's lover, Antony comes to us largely by way of smear or caricature. But alongside the more familiar accusations of sleaze, drunkenness, debauchery, and treachery, Tatum brings into sharp focus his towering importance as a successful general, statesman, and orator. Written with characteristic flair and impeccable scholarship, A Noble Ruin gives a new life not only to Antony but to the violent and revolutionary times in which he operated.
Tatum's A Noble Ruin offers a striking portrait of the dynamic figure who, but for the utterly unprecedented emergence of the teenaged Octavian, would have shaped the future of Rome and the Mediterranean world following the death of Julius Caesar. The complicated, skilled, and flawed Antony that Tatum reveals is both far more compelling than the caricatures found in the vicious but effective propaganda of Cicero and Octavian, and far more important than people interested in the stories of faltering republics and the fates of the people caught up in them often imagine.
An insightful biography of Mark Antony (83-30 BCE) that counters longstanding depictions of the Roman general as hedonistic and overly passionate... Tatum artfully analyzes Antony's 'adaptable' and 'fiercely competitive' personality as a product, rather than a deviation from, his aristocratic republican milieu. Roman history buffs will welcome this comprehensive reassessment.
Tatum offers a nuanced perspective on his life, ambitions, and political actions.
This vivid biography pulses with energy and erudition.
A gripping portrait of a figure who, as much as any, embodies the Roman world as it teetered in mid-slide from republic to empire. It's a dazzling achievement-authoritative, engaging, and marvelously readable... A Noble Ruin glides along with an irresistible momentum that complements its beguiling evocations of people, events, and exotic settings. It deserves to become an enduring go-to volume for the lay reader and, one hopes, the scholar.
[An] excellent biography. It is one of A Noble Ruin's great strengths that Tatum acknowledges the power of the hostile stories that accumulated around Antony. He also unpacks the motives that led Antony's contemporaries to tell those stories and places them within a meticulously argued account of the wider historical period.
Brilliant... Tatum's work is far more than a mere biography. He deftly takes the reader through the almost impenetrable final years of the Republic and the competing personalities and cultural transformations of the era. Understanding these years can deter even the most ardent specialists. But readers of this book will not only come away with a comprehension of the life of the triumvir himself, but the world of the 50s, 40s, and 30s BC when famous personalities such as Pompey, Caesar, Cicero, Cleopatra and Octavian competed for the world... [A] major contribution to Hellenistic and Roman studies.
A Noble Ruin offers readers a thorough re-examination of an important figure in ancient history.
With his trademark brilliance in making sense of partial and often highly vituperative classical sources, Tatum gives us a nuanced and wonderfully readable portrait of a man whom he describes as a 'kind of guilty pleasure.'
As Caesar's right-hand man and Cleopatra's lover, Antony comes to us largely by way of smear or caricature. But alongside the more familiar accusations of sleaze, drunkenness, debauchery, and treachery, Tatum brings into sharp focus his towering importance as a successful general, statesman, and orator. Written with characteristic flair and impeccable scholarship, A Noble Ruin gives a new life not only to Antony but to the violent and revolutionary times in which he operated.
Tatum's A Noble Ruin offers a striking portrait of the dynamic figure who, but for the utterly unprecedented emergence of the teenaged Octavian, would have shaped the future of Rome and the Mediterranean world following the death of Julius Caesar. The complicated, skilled, and flawed Antony that Tatum reveals is both far more compelling than the caricatures found in the vicious but effective propaganda of Cicero and Octavian, and far more important than people interested in the stories of faltering republics and the fates of the people caught up in them often imagine.
An insightful biography of Mark Antony (83-30 BCE) that counters longstanding depictions of the Roman general as hedonistic and overly passionate... Tatum artfully analyzes Antony's 'adaptable' and 'fiercely competitive' personality as a product, rather than a deviation from, his aristocratic republican milieu. Roman history buffs will welcome this comprehensive reassessment.
Tatum offers a nuanced perspective on his life, ambitions, and political actions.
This vivid biography pulses with energy and erudition.
A gripping portrait of a figure who, as much as any, embodies the Roman world as it teetered in mid-slide from republic to empire. It's a dazzling achievement-authoritative, engaging, and marvelously readable... A Noble Ruin glides along with an irresistible momentum that complements its beguiling evocations of people, events, and exotic settings. It deserves to become an enduring go-to volume for the lay reader and, one hopes, the scholar.
[An] excellent biography. It is one of A Noble Ruin's great strengths that Tatum acknowledges the power of the hostile stories that accumulated around Antony. He also unpacks the motives that led Antony's contemporaries to tell those stories and places them within a meticulously argued account of the wider historical period.
Brilliant... Tatum's work is far more than a mere biography. He deftly takes the reader through the almost impenetrable final years of the Republic and the competing personalities and cultural transformations of the era. Understanding these years can deter even the most ardent specialists. But readers of this book will not only come away with a comprehension of the life of the triumvir himself, but the world of the 50s, 40s, and 30s BC when famous personalities such as Pompey, Caesar, Cicero, Cleopatra and Octavian competed for the world... [A] major contribution to Hellenistic and Roman studies.
A Noble Ruin offers readers a thorough re-examination of an important figure in ancient history.
Notă biografică
W. Jeffrey Tatum is Professor of Classics at Victoria University of Wellington (New Zealand). He is the author of Always I Am Caesar, translator of Quintus Cicero's A Brief Handbook on Canvassing for Office (for the Clarendon Ancient History Series), and co-translator of Plutarch's The Rise of Rome (for Penguin Classics).