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Cicero and the Rise of Deification at Rome

An innovative case study in religious change in Rome that examines how Cicero explores and experiments with concepts of deification.

Spencer Cole (Author)

9781107032507, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 9 January 2014

216 pages
23.5 x 15.8 x 1.6 cm, 0.45 kg

This book tells a part of the back-story to major religious transformations emerging from the tumult of the late Republic. It considers the dynamic interplay of Cicero's approximations of mortals and immortals with a range of artifacts and activities that were collectively closing the divide between humans and gods. A guiding principle is that a major cultural player like Cicero had a normative function in religious dialogues that could legitimize incipient ideas like deification. Applying contemporary metaphor theory, it analyzes the strategies and priorities configuring Cicero's divinizing encomia of Roman dynasts like Pompey, Caesar and Octavian. It also examines Cicero's explorations of apotheosis and immortality in the De re publica and Tusculan Disputations as well as his attempts to deify his daughter Tullia. In this book, Professor Cole transforms our understanding not only of the backgrounds to ruler worship but also of changing conceptions of death and the afterlife.

Introduction
1. The cultural work of metaphor
2. Experiments and invented traditions
3. Charting the posthumous path
4. Revisions and Rome's new god
Conclusions.

Subject Areas: Ancient religions & mythologies [HRKP], Classical history / classical civilisation [HBLA1], Ancient history: to c 500 CE [HBLA]

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