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A Commentary on Silius Italicus' Punica 10 (Hardcover)
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A Commentary on Silius Italicus' Punica 10 (Hardcover)
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The Battle of Cannae represents a conflict of mighty powers and a
crushing defeat, notoriously the worst in Rome's history. Dawn on 2
August 216 BC saw the armies of Rome and Carthage clash in what the
participants hoped would be the decisive engagement for supremacy
in Mediterranean trade and empire. Punica 10 opens with the final
phase of the battle, when there lingered no hope of victory in the
Roman ranks. The military narrative moves mercilessly through the
aristeia and death of the heroic consul Paulus to the ghastly
tableau of Roman defeat. But the mystique of Cannae lies in a
paradox: that the army ignominiously vanquished emerges the
ultimate victor. Although night falls on a battlefield littered
with the wreckage of Rome's military might and a triumphant victor
still unsated with Roman blood, the second half of the book unfolds
a sequence of unexpected twists in the action which destabilize
Hannibal's confidence and initiate acts of heroism inspiring fresh
resolution in the traumatized Romans. In one of Silius' finest
books, the climactic sweep of his epic is enriched by intertextual
allusions to Virgil's great narrative of epic closure, Aeneid 12.
In contrast to her earlier commentary on Punica 7, which explores
intertexts associated with Hannibal's desecration of rural Italy,
R. Joy Littlewood's new commentary focuses on Silius' military
narrative; the poetics of defeat with its imagery of shipwreck and
the spectacle of death in the Roman amphitheatre. It aims to show
how a poet with long experience in politics as a senior senator in
the first century AD interpreted Rome's historic disaster and
eventual triumph in the light of his own experiences of civil war
and a swift succession of Roman emperors. Presented here alongside
the Latin text and translation, and supplemented with plans of the
battlefield, this commentary offers both philological and stylistic
exegesis together with historical analysis and up-to-date literary
criticism. It is accompanied by an extended introduction including
analyses of Silius' adaptation of Livy's Cannae narrative, of the
contrasting moral strengths of his three Roman heroes, and of the
ideas contained in the intertextually rich, exemplary epigram which
closes Book 10.
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