TY - JOUR
T1 - Rush Job
T2 - Slavery and brevity in the early roman principate
AU - Geue, Tom
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Cambridge Philological Society.
PY - 2022/12/1
Y1 - 2022/12/1
N2 - The upswing in brief forms of literature in the early Roman principate is marked. From Ovid to Velleius Paterculus, Phaedrus to Valerius Maximus, this aesthetic trend seems to transcend genre. Such a phenomenon has thus far been understood as arising from either the pressures of literary tradition or the transformations in the organisation of elite knowledge. This article disagrees. It posits a new prospective causality behind the eruption in brevity, namely the state of slavery and its time-conscious way of being in the world. The article performs a close comparative reading of Phaedrus' Fables alongside Velleius Paterculus' Compendium of Roman History to show how brevity and its suspension can be understood as formal constraints, acts of service and redemptive aesthetic coping modes - all determined by the historical conditions of enslavement. It concludes with a coda on the general association of poetry with bondage and constraint in the late Republic and early Empire.
AB - The upswing in brief forms of literature in the early Roman principate is marked. From Ovid to Velleius Paterculus, Phaedrus to Valerius Maximus, this aesthetic trend seems to transcend genre. Such a phenomenon has thus far been understood as arising from either the pressures of literary tradition or the transformations in the organisation of elite knowledge. This article disagrees. It posits a new prospective causality behind the eruption in brevity, namely the state of slavery and its time-conscious way of being in the world. The article performs a close comparative reading of Phaedrus' Fables alongside Velleius Paterculus' Compendium of Roman History to show how brevity and its suspension can be understood as formal constraints, acts of service and redemptive aesthetic coping modes - all determined by the historical conditions of enslavement. It concludes with a coda on the general association of poetry with bondage and constraint in the late Republic and early Empire.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85142268700&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1017/S1750270522000082
DO - 10.1017/S1750270522000082
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85142268700
SN - 1750-2705
VL - 68
SP - 83
EP - 111
JO - Cambridge Classical Journal
JF - Cambridge Classical Journal
ER -