Racial Prejudice in Imperial Rome
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:4th Feb '10
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Sherwin-White examines the literary evidence for racial tension during the Roman Imperial period.
Although Roman Imperialism unified a diversity of peoples into a centralised political unit, racial and cultural prejudice persisted. Sherwin-White has taken as his theme the literary evidence for racial tension during the Roman Imperial period. The author's synthesis of this evidence in the classical literature makes a notable contribution to Roman studies.Although Roman Imperialism unified a diversity of peoples into a centralised political unit, racial and cultural prejudice persisted. It took forms of varying significance, ranging from a lawyer's gibes at Celts for their long hair to the massacre of 10,000 Jews at Damascus during the reign of Nero. Sherwin-White has taken as his theme the literary evidence for racial tension during the Roman Imperial period. He begins by considering the criticisms by Tacitus, Strabo and Caesar of the Celts and Germans encountered during the annexation of Northern Gaul and Britain. These criticisms, which were sometimes hostile and political, principally concern celtic barbarism. They offer a stark contrast to the subsequent analysis of the antipathy between Romans and Greeks in the artificial atmosphere of Rome, and the anti-semitism characteristic of certain cities of the Eastern provinces. The author's synthesis of numerous relevant references in the classical literature makes a notable contribution to Roman studies.
ISBN: 9780521128926
Dimensions: 198mm x 129mm x 6mm
Weight: 120g
116 pages