Fr. 138.00

Chasing the Idea of Completeness - Great Book Collections in the Roman World

English · Hardback

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Description

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This book sets out to explore how the Romans appropriated the Hellenistic concept of a complete library collection. Tracing this idea in the Roman world allows us to reconstruct the discourse on cultural transmission between Greece and Rome. The model of a super-library dominated the landscape of the Hellenistic period. The Romans were fascinated by this ideal, but never wholly embraced it and never formed one leading book collection of their own. This book attempts to answer the questions resulting from this observation: How did the Romans perceive the shifting of the world's cultural omphalos throughout their dominance in the Mediterranean? How did they map the empire of books? How did they acquire books for their private collections? This book contributes to the current debate on ancient scholarship by discussing the evolution of the concept of the library in Rome from a broad and novel perspective, thanks to approaching a gamut of sources which have not previously been brought into the scholarship on Roman libraries, such as Terence's programmatic prologues, testimonies on early Roman literary studies, or the Roman Didascaliae inscription. In addition, a fresh perspective is offered on Galen's newly discovered Peri alypias.

About the author

Katarzyna Pietruczuk, University of Warsaw, Warsaw, Poland.

Summary

This book sets out to explore how the Romans appropriated the Hellenistic concept of a complete library collection. Tracing this idea in the Roman world allows us to reconstruct the discourse on cultural transmission between Greece and Rome. The model of a super-library dominated the landscape of the Hellenistic period. The Romans were fascinated by this ideal, but never wholly embraced it and never formed one leading book collection of their own. This book attempts to answer the questions resulting from this observation: How did the Romans perceive the shifting of the world’s cultural omphalos throughout their dominance in the Mediterranean? How did they map the empire of books? How did they acquire books for their private collections? This book contributes to the current debate on ancient scholarship by discussing the evolution of the concept of the library in Rome from a broad and novel perspective, thanks to approaching a gamut of sources which have not previously been brought into the scholarship on Roman libraries, such as Terence’s programmatic prologues, testimonies on early Roman literary studies, or the Roman Didascaliae inscription. In addition, a fresh perspective is offered on Galen’s newly discovered Peri alypias.

Product details

Authors Katarzyna Pietruczuk
Publisher De Gruyter
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 17.03.2025
 
EAN 9783111634388
ISBN 978-3-11-163438-8
No. of pages 242
Dimensions 160 mm x 18 mm x 235 mm
Weight 482 g
Illustrations 3 b/w ill.
Series Trends in Classics - Supplementary Volumes
Subjects Humanities, art, music > History > Antiquity

Social & cultural history, Bibliothek: Erwerb und Aufbau von Sammlungen, Literary studies: classical, early & medieval, Ancient history: to c 500 CE, LIT004190 LITERARY CRITICISM / Ancient & Classical, ancient libraries, Antike Bibliothek, Antike Gelehrsamkeit, ancient scholarship, books in antiquity

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