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After a period of neglect, Ovid's elegiac poem on the Roman
calendar has been the focus of much recent scholarship. In her
comprehensive and scholarly study of the final book, Joy Littlewood
analyzes Ovid's account of the origins of the festivals of June,
demonstrating that Book 6 is effectively a commemoration of Roman
War, and elegantly provides a framing bracket to balance the
opening celebration of Peace in Book 1. She explores the subtle
interweaving of pietas and virtus in Roman religion and its
relationship to Augustan ideology, the depth and accuracy of Ovid's
antiquarianism, and his audacious expansion of generic boundaries.
Hannibal's crossing of the Alps represents a momentous event in the
beginning of the Second Punic War (218-202 BCE). The third book of
Silius Italicus' Punica reimagines this courageous feat, retracing
the journey of Hannibal and his army from the temple of
Hercules/Melqart in Gades, across the Pyrenees, the Rhone, and the
Alpine peaks into northern Italy. Significant stages in the journey
are marked by prophecies: the gods reveal to Hannibal in a dream
his future destruction of Italy through a dream with a giant snake;
Jupiter unveils to his daughter Venus the future of the Roman
empire through the Flavians and Domitian himself; the oracle of
Hammon in the African desert prophesies the Roman defeat at Cannae.
The Flavian poet builds his narrative around several key episodes
that programmatically set the tone for the whole poem: separation
from family, a futuristic distinction between African and Iberian
troops in the catalogue, the transgressive nature of Hannibal's
struggle with nature and the divine. The commentary explores each
scene in the context of the poetic, philosophical, and
historiographic background, with reference also to material
culture. The philological and stylistic exegeses aim to reveal the
linguistic complexities which colour this fascinating Flavian
reconstruction of the topos of 'the epic hero's journey'. The Latin
text is presented alongside an English translation and supplemented
with maps and images to support understanding the broad historical
context of Silius' poem.
Once stigmatized as 'the worst epic ever written', Silius Italicus'
Punica is now the focus of a resurgence of critical interest and
wide-ranging positive reappraisal. In a climate of flourishing
interest in Flavian literary culture, Punica 7 now joins the rising
number of commentaries on Flavian epic. While offering an
insightful analysis of Silius' complex intertextuality, Littlewood
demonstrates how his republican theme bears the imprint of Rome's
more recent experience of civil conflict and the military and civic
ethos of the Flavians, and illuminates the poet's engagement with
luxuria, exploring tensions within the literary and political
culture of the Age of Domitian. The narrative of Punica 7 is a tale
of treachery and perseverance, of a battle of wills and the
desecration of the Italian land, which is poetically interpreted
through intertextual allusion to Virgil's Georgics. In the centre
of the book Hannibal commits the anti-pastoral atrocity of igniting
2000 Roman ploughing oxen to simulate a nocturnal raid based on
Homer's Doloneia. The burning flesh of this subverted sacrifice,
interwoven with imagery evoking bacchanal madness and the rising
smoke of the sack of Troy, sets the stage for a dramatic finale in
which Rome's traditional virtues triumph over oriental guile and
internal discord. This penetrating study explores how the
historical narrative coalesces with mythology, the proto-history of
Rome, and the genealogy of its protagonists.
Littlewood's volume is the first full English commentary on a book
of Silius Italicus' Punica and is supported by an extended
introduction covering Silius' life, his literary models, the
characterization of his protagonists, Fabius and Hannibal, his epic
style, and the transmission of the text.
The region of Campania with its fertility and volcanic landscape
exercised great influence over the Roman cultural imagination. A
hub of activity outside the city of Rome, the Bay of Naples was a
place of otium, leisure and quiet, repose and literary
productivity, and yet also a place of danger: the looming Vesuvius
inspired both fear and awe in the region's inhabitants, while the
Phlegraean Fields evoked the story of the gigantomachy and
sulphurous lakes invited entry to the Underworld. For Flavian
writers in particular, Campania became a locus for literary
activity and geographical disaster when in 79 CE, the eruption of
the volcano annihilated a great expanse of the region, burying
under a mass of ash and lava the surrounding cities of Pompeii,
Herculaneum, and Stabiae. In the aftermath of such tragedy the
writers examined in this volume - Martial, Silius Italicus,
Statius, and Valerius Flaccus - continued to live, work, and write
about Campania, which emerges from their work as an alluring region
held in the balance of luxury and peril.
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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