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book (5)


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English (4)

French (1)


Year
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2011 (5)

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Carthage must be destroyed : the rise and fall of an ancient civilization
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ISBN: 9780141018096 0141018097 Year: 2011 Publisher: London Penguin

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Book
La véritable histoire d'Hannibal
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ISBN: 9782251040110 2251040110 Year: 2011 Volume: 11 Publisher: Paris : les Belles lettres,


Book
Hannibal
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ISBN: 1597977667 9781597977661 9781597976862 1597976865 Year: 2011 Publisher: Washington, D.C. Potomac Books

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The life of Rome's fiercest would-be conquerer


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A commentary on Silius Italicus' Punica 7.
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ISBN: 9780199570935 0199570930 Year: 2011 Publisher: Oxford Oxford university press


Book
Valorizing the Barbarians : enemy speeches in Roman historiography
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ISBN: 9780292726284 0292726287 029272991X 029274403X Year: 2011 Publisher: Austin : University of Texas Press,

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With the growth of postcolonial theory in recent decades, scholarly views of Roman imperialism and colonialism have been evolving and shifting. Much recent discussion of the topic has centered on the ways in which ancient Roman historians consciously or unconsciously denigrated non-Romans. Similarly, contemporary scholars have downplayed Roman elite anxiety about their empire's expansion. In this groundbreaking new work, Eric Adler explores the degree to which ancient historians of Rome were capable of valorizing foreigners and presenting criticisms of their own society. By examining speeches put into the mouths of barbarian leaders by a variety of writers, he investigates how critical of the empire these historians could be. Adler examines pairs of speeches purportedly delivered by non-Roman leaders so that the contrast between them might elucidate each writer's sense of imperialism. Analyses of Sallust's and Trogus's treatments of the Eastern ruler Mithradates, Polybius's and Livy's speeches from Carthage's Hannibal, and Tacitus's and Cassius Dio's accounts of the oratory of the Celtic warrior queen Boudica form the core of this study. Adler supplements these with examinations of speeches from other characters, as well as contextual narrative from the historians. Throughout, Adler wrestles with broader issues of Roman imperialism and historiography, including administrative greed and corruption in the provinces, the treatment of gender and sexuality, and ethnic stereotyping.

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