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Latin literature is a hotbed of holes and erasures. Its sensitivity
to politics leaves it ripe for repression of all sorts of names,
places and historical events, while its dense allusivity appears to
hide interpretative clues in a network of texts that only the
reader's consciousness can make present. This volume showcases
innovative approaches to the field of Latin literature, all of
which are refracted through this prism of absence, which functions
as a fundamental generative force both for the hermeneutics and the
ongoing literary aftermath of these texts. Reviewing and working
with various influential approaches to textual absence, the
contributors to Unspoken Rome treat these texts as silent types,
listening out for what they do not say, and how they do not speak,
whilst also tracing the ill-defined borders within which scholars
and modern authors are legitimized to fill in the silences around
which they are built.
The satirist Juvenal remains one of antiquity's greatest question
marks. His Satires entered the mainstream of the classical
tradition with nothing more than an uncertain name and a dubious
biography to recommend them. Tom Geue argues that the missing
author figure is no mere casualty of time's passage, but a
startling, concerted effect of the Satires themselves. Scribbling
dangerous social critique under a historical maximum of paranoia,
Juvenal harnessed this dark energy by wiping all traces of himself
- signature, body, biographical snippets, social connections - from
his reticent texts. This last major ambassador of a once
self-betraying genre took a radical leap into the anonymous.
Juvenal and the Poetics of Anonymity tracks this mystifying
self-concealment over the whole Juvenalian corpus. Through probing
close readings, it shows how important the missing author was to
this satire, and how that absence echoes and amplifies the neurotic
politics of writing under surveillance.
An exploration of the darker corners of ancient Rome to spotlight
the strange sorcery of anonymous literature. From Banksy to Elena
Ferrante to the unattributed parchments of ancient Rome, art
without clear authorship fascinates and even offends us. Classical
scholarship tends to treat this anonymity as a problem or game-a
defect to be repaired or mystery to be solved. Author Unknown is
the first book to consider anonymity as a site of literary interest
rather than a gap that needs filling. We can tether each work to an
identity, or we can stand back and ask how the absence of a name
affects the meaning and experience of literature. Tom Geue turns to
antiquity to show what the suppression or loss of a name can do for
literature. Anonymity supported the illusion of Augustus's
sprawling puppet mastery (Res Gestae), controlled and destroyed the
victims of a curse (Ovid's Ibis), and created out of whole cloth a
poetic persona and career (Phaedrus's Fables). To assume these
texts are missing something is to dismiss a source of their power
and presume that ancient authors were as hungry for fame as
today's. In this original look at Latin literature, Geue asks us to
work with anonymity rather than against it and to appreciate the
continuing power of anonymity in our own time.
The satirist Juvenal remains one of antiquity's greatest question
marks. His Satires entered the mainstream of the classical
tradition with nothing more than an uncertain name and a dubious
biography to recommend them. Tom Geue argues that the missing
author figure is no mere casualty of time's passage, but a
startling, concerted effect of the Satires themselves. Scribbling
dangerous social critique under a historical maximum of paranoia,
Juvenal harnessed this dark energy by wiping all traces of himself
- signature, body, biographical snippets, social connections - from
his reticent texts. This last major ambassador of a once
self-betraying genre took a radical leap into the anonymous.
Juvenal and the Poetics of Anonymity tracks this mystifying
self-concealment over the whole Juvenalian corpus. Through probing
close readings, it shows how important the missing author was to
this satire, and how that absence echoes and amplifies the neurotic
politics of writing under surveillance.
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