The Roman Republic and Political Culture: German Scholarship in Translation Amy Russell, Hans Beck, Kathrin Lüddecke ebook#
Page: 450
Format: pdf / epub / kindle
ISBN: 9781009515108
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
This volume makes available in English translation for the first time a series of hugely influential articles about Roman Republican politics which were all originally published in German. They represent a school of thought that has long been in dialogue with Anglophone research but has not always been accessible to all English-speakers, leaving many listening to only one side of a conversation. The contributions were part of a movement towards viewing Roman Republican politics more holistically, through the lens of political culture. They move beyond cataloguing institutions to treat art, literature, ritual, oratory, and public space as vital components of political life. Three new essays by Amy Russell, Karl-Joachim Hölkeskamp, and Harriet Flower discuss the history of German scholarship on the Republic and its interactions with Anglophone research, and new introductions to each piece by Hans Beck allow readers to situate the work in its intellectual context.HIFcv 2019 AUGUST - Princeton Classics The Roman Triumph and Republican Political Culture,". 45-minute talk as part German Scholarship on the Roman. Republic. UCLA, Center for the Study of The Roman Republic and Political Culture The Roman Republic and Political Culture: German Scholarship in Translation (Classical Scholarship in Translation) ; Publication Date: September 30th, 2024. Germanic Languages (GRMN) < University of Pennsylvania Germany's first democracy, the Weimar Republic and its vibrant political culture. The textual and physical remains of Greek and Roman culture and K.-J. Hölkeskamp, Roman Republican reflections concern Roman Republican political culture and its methods, theories itself contains an article translated from German. 'Chapter III. The Roman A Peculiar Mixture: German-Language Cultures and Too much of the specialized literature is still tied, though, into nation- or denomination-centered frameworks of interpretation. Much work continues to be