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Representing Rome's Emperors brings together an international team of experts to examine the literary and artistic representations of Roman emperors across more than two thousand years of history, breaking down traditional disciplinary boundaries that have separated the study of emperors in antiquity from their representation in later periods.
List of contents
- 1: Caillan Davenport and Shushma Malik: Introduction
- 2: Rhiannon Ash: Tiberius in Space: Proxemics and the Portrayal of the Princeps
- 3: Eleanor Cowan: Julio-Claudian Emperors as Fathers and Sons
- 4: Estelle Strazdins: Herodes Atticus, Hadrian, and the Antonines: Mediating Power and Self-Promotion in Achaea through Public and Private Display
- 5: Lucy Grig: Looking for Representations of Emperors in Late Antique Popular Culture
- 6: Meaghan McEvoy: Educating Theodosius II: Theodosian Child-Emperors and the Manipulation of the Imperial Image
- 7: M. Shane Bjornlie: Jordanes and the End of the Roman Empire
- 8: Filippo Carlà-Uhink: 'Per voler del primo amor ch'i' sento': Justinian and Theodora from the Sixth to Sixteenth Centuries
- 9: Frances Muecke: The Humanists and the Emperors: The Case of Biondo Flavio (1392-1463)
- 10: Shushma Malik: Roman Emperors in Montesquieu's Considerations
- 11: Penelope Goodman: Retrospective Parentage: Augustus as a Father of Europe
- 12: David Scourfield: Fictions of Power: Thornton Wilder's The Ides of March and John Williams' Augustus
- 13: Caillan Davenport and Shushma Malik: Epilogue: Towards a Methodology of Representation
About the author
Caillan Davenport is Associate Professor of Classics and Head of the Centre for Classical Studies at The Australian National University. He was educated at the University of Queensland and the University of Oxford before holding posts at Queensland, Macquarie University, and ANU. He has received an Australian Research Council Discovery Early Career Award and an Alexander von Humboldt Foundation Fellowship for Experienced Researchers. He is the author of A History of the Roman Equestrian Order (2019), which won the Royal Historical Society's Gladstone Prize.
Shushma Malik is Assistant Professor of Classics at the University of Cambridge, and Onassis Classics Fellow at Newnham College, Cambridge. She graduated with a PhD in Classics from the University of Bristol in 2013, and since then has held posts at the Universities of Manchester, Queensland, Roehampton, and Cambridge. She has research expertise in imperial Rome and its reception, and is author of The Nero-Antichrist: Founding and Fashioning a Paradigm (2020). From 2020-2023, Shushma was Co-Investigator on a research project co-funded by the AHRC (UK) and DFG (Germany) on the study of ancient corruption.
Summary
Representing Rome's Emperors brings together an international team of experts to examine the literary and artistic representations of Roman emperors across more than two thousand years of history, breaking down traditional disciplinary boundaries that have separated the study of emperors in antiquity from their representation in later periods.