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Pestilence and the Body Politic in Latin Literature (Hardcover)
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Pestilence and the Body Politic in Latin Literature (Hardcover)
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Scientists, journalists, novelists, and filmmakers continue to
generate narratives of contagion, stories shaped by a tradition of
disease discourse that extends to early Greco-Roman literature.
Lucretius, Vergil, and Ovid developed important conventions of the
western plague narrative as a response to the breakdown of the
Roman res publica in the mid-first century CE and the
reconstitution of stabilized government under the Augustan
Principate (31 BCE-14 CE): relying on the metaphoric relationship
between the human body and the body politic, these authors used
largely fictive representations of epidemic disease to address the
collapse of the social order and suggest remedies for its recovery.
Theorists such as Susan Sontag and Rene Girard have observed how
the rhetoric of disease frequently signals social, psychological,
or political pathologies, but their observations have rarely been
applied to Latin literary practices. Pestilence and the Body
Politic in Latin Literature explores how the origins and spread of
outbreaks described by Roman writers enact a drama in which the
concerns of the individual must be weighed against those of the
collective, staged in an environment signalling both reversion to a
pre-historic Golden Age and the devastation characteristic of a
post-apocalyptic landscape. Such innovations in Latin literature
have impacted representations as diverse as Carlo Coppola's
paintings of a seventeenth-century outbreak of bubonic plague in
Naples and Margaret Atwood's Maddaddam Trilogy. Understanding why
Latin writers developed these tropes for articulating contagious
disease and imbuing them with meaning for the collapse of the Roman
body politic allows us to clarify what more recent disease
discourses mean both for their creators and for the populations
they afflict in contemporary media.
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