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Ethnic Identity and Aristocratic Competition in Republican Rome
Farney explores how senators from Rome's Republican period manipulated their ethnic identity for political gain.
Gary D. Farney (Author)
9780521863315, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 18 June 2007
358 pages
23.5 x 15.8 x 2.5 cm, 0.616 kg
'Farney's effort is a fine work of scholarship constituting stimulating reading with many novel ideas and points of view. It is a most important contribution to our understanding of the history and society of the Roman Republic.' Arctos
The ancient Romans are usually thought of as a monolithic ethnic group, though in fact they formed a self-consciously pluralistic society. In this book, Gary D. Farney explores how senators from Rome's Republican period celebrated and manipulated their ethnic identity to get ahead in Rome's political culture. He examines how politicians from these lands tried to advertise positive aspects of their ethnic identity, how others tried to re-create a negative identity into something positive, and how ethnic identity advertisement developed over the course of Republican history. Finally, in an epilogue, Farney addresses how the various Italic identities coalesced into a singular Italian identity in the Empire, and how Rome's experience with Italic groups informed how it perceived other groups, such as Gauls, Germans, and Greeks.
1. Duae patriae
2. Homo Romanus natus in Latio
3. Romanus atque Sabinus
4. Tusci ac barbari
5. Minicipalia illa prodigia
6. Transferendo huc quod usquam egregium fuerit.
Subject Areas: Politics & government [JP], Classical history / classical civilisation [HBLA1]