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After the daggers : politics and persuasion after the assassination of Caesar
- Publication Year :
- 2010
- Publisher :
- University of St Andrews, 2010.
-
Abstract
- In this thesis, I examine the nature and role of persuasion in Roman politics in the period immediately following the assassination of Caesar on the Ides of March 44 B.C. until the capture of the city of Rome by his heir Octavianus in August 43 B.C. The purpose of my thesis is to assess the extent to which persuasion played a critical role in political interactions and in the decision-making processes of those involved during this crucial period in Roman history. I do this by means of a careful discussion and analysis of a variety of different types of political interactions, both public and private. As regards the means of persuasion, I concentrate on the role and use of oratory in these political interactions. Consequently, my thesis owes much in terms of approach to the work of Millar (1998) and, more recently, Morstein-Marx (2004) on placing oratory at the centre of our understanding of how politics functioned in practice in the late Roman republic. Their studies, however, focus on the potential extent and significance of mass participation in the late Roman republican political system, and on the contio as the key locus of political interaction. In my thesis, I contribute to improving our new way of understanding late Roman republican politics by taking a broader approach that incorporates other types of political interactions in which oratory played a significant role. I also examine oratory as but one of a variety of means of persuasion in Roman political interactions. Finally, in analyzing politics and persuasion in the period immediately after Caesar’s assassination, I am examining not only a crucial period in Roman history, but one which is perhaps the best documented from the ancient world. The relative richness of contemporary evidence for this period calls out for the sort of close reading of sources and detailed analysis that I provide in my thesis that enables a better understanding of how politics actually played out in the late Roman republic.
- Subjects :
- 930
Rome -- History -- Republic
44 - 43 BC
Rome -- Politics & government -- Republic
44 - 43 BC
Persuasion (Rhetoric)
Oratory
Ancient
Cicero
Marcus Tullius
Brutus
Marcus Iunius
DG268.M25
Cicero
Marcus Tullius. Philippicae
Persuasion (Rhetoric)
Persuasion (Psychology)
Persuasion (Psychology)
Speeches
addresses
etc.
Latin--History and criticism
Communication in politics--Rome--History
Public opinion--Rome
Rome--History--Republic
265-30 B.C.
Rome--History--Augustus
30 B.C.-14 A.D.
Rome--Politics and government--265-30 B.C.
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- British Library EThOS
- Publication Type :
- Dissertation/ Thesis
- Accession number :
- edsble.552398
- Document Type :
- Electronic Thesis or Dissertation