When Nero took the stage, the audience played along--or else.
The drama thus enacted, whether in the theater proper or in the
political arena, unfolds in all its rich complexity in "Actors in
the Audience." This is a book about language, theatricality, and
empire--about how the Roman emperor dramatized his rule and how his
subordinates in turn staged their response. The focus is on Nero:
his performances onstage spurred his contemporaries to reflect on
the nature of power and representation, and to make the stage a
paradigm for larger questions about the theatricality of power.
Through these portrayals by ancient writers, Shadi Bartsch explores
what happens to language and representation when all discourse is
distorted by the pull of an autocratic authority.
Some Roman senators, forced to become actors and dissimulators
under the scrutinizing eye of the ruler, portrayed themselves and
their class as the victims of regimes that are, for us, redolent of
Stalinism. Other writers claimed that doublespeak--saying one thing
and meaning two--was the way one could, and did, undo the
constraining effects of imperial oppression. Tacitus, Suetonius,
and Juvenal all figure in Bartsch's shrewd analysis of historical
and literary responses to the brute facts of empire; even the
"Panegyricus" of Pliny the Younger now appears as a reaction
against the widespread awareness of dissimulation. Informed by
theories of dramaturgy, sociology, new historicism, and cultural
criticism, this close reading of literary and historical texts
gives us a new perspective on the politics of the Roman empire--and
on the languages and representation of power.
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