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Informationen zum Autor THE AUTHOR MARGARET MALAMUD is associate professor of ancient history and Islamic Studies at New Mexico State University. She is co-editor of Imperial Projections: Ancient Rome in Modern Popular Culture (2001). Klappentext CLASSICAL RECEPTIONS ANCIENT ROME AND MODERN AMERICA The idea of Rome as the virtuous Republic undermined by imperial corruption haunts the American imagination. In fact, Roman antiquity is arguably the most abiding cultural companion of the United States. Ever since the Revolutionary era, images and narratives of Rome have played a central role in shaping America's perception of itself. Ancient Rome and Modern America explores charged moments in United States history when ancient Rome has been appropriated by disparate groups in order to debate the state of the nation and address internal tensions and anxieties. It shows how portrayals of Rome have been used by various classes and interest groups both to articulate and to contest political and cultural identities. The malleability of tradition and the remarkable continuity of Rome in the American imagination emerge powerfully under Malamud's lens. In this book, we learn as much about America's 'forgotten' history as we do about Rome. This text will appeal to readers interested in alternative views on US history, as well as to those interested in the uses of ancient Rome today. Zusammenfassung Ancient Rome and Modern America explores the vital role the narratives and images of Rome have played in America's understanding of itself and its history. Inhaltsverzeichnis List of Illustrations vii Acknowledgments x Introduction 1 1 Exemplary Romans in the Early Republic 9 2 Working Men's Heroes 34 3 Rome and the Politics of Slavery 70 4 Corporate Caesars and Radical Reformers 98 5 Manifest Virtue 122 6 The Pleasures of Empire 150 7 Screening Rome During the Great Depression 186 8 Cold War Romans 208 9 Imperial Consumption 229 Epilogue 253 Bibliography 261 Filmography 279 Index 280 ...