Civil War
Exploring the turmoil of the Roman Republic's final days
Lucan author Brian Walters translator W R Johnson editor
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Hackett Publishing Co, Inc
Published:21st Aug '15
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
In Civil War, Lucan presents a dark exploration of political disintegration during the Roman Republic, focusing on the conflict between Caesar and Pompey.
Written during the reign of Nero, a time marked by political intrigue and personal peril for the poet Lucan, Civil War emerges as a dark and complex narrative. This unfinished masterpiece delves into the disintegration of the Roman political landscape, focusing on the tumultuous conflict between Julius Caesar and Pompey, which ultimately contributed to the fall of the Roman Republic. Lucan's work is steeped in historical context yet infused with elements of fantasy, creating a rich tapestry that reflects the chaos of the era.
Brian Walters, in his translation, aims to capture the essence of Lucan's original poem while making it accessible to contemporary readers. He embraces the rhetorical excesses that characterize Civil War, preserving the intricate blend of high and low language, narrative styles, and declamatory elements that define Lucan's voice. This commitment to authenticity ensures that readers can appreciate the depth and complexity of the text without oversimplification.
Accompanying the translation is a brilliant introduction by W. R. Johnson, who explores the poem's connections to Nero and the concept of monarchy, the invocation of chaos, and the portrayal of its true hero. Additional resources, including synopses of individual books, suggestions for further reading, a glossary of names and places, and a detailed map, enhance the reader's understanding of this monumental work.
"Brian Walters has given us what too few translators of classical poetry do—an authorial presence. Here is Lucan himself in all his drastic modes—everything from his enraged indignation to his paradoxical aphorisms--recreating the ruptured Neronian world he lived in as he recounts the nefarious civil war that destroyed the Roman Republic."
—Stanley Lombardo, University of Kansas
"Brian Walters, aware that the poem's 'obsessive meditations on tyranny and the corruption of power' fit the times, brings to life in his translation the fractured state of the late Roman Republic as Julius Caesar's compulsive boundary-crossing chips away at the increasingly futile resistance of Pompey and Cato. Lucan's violent content demands an equivalent violence of expression, and here Walter's is especially successful, as during the naval slaughter at Massilia (3.549-803) or Erichtho's reanimation of a young soldier's corpse (6.760-883. He really hits his grisly stride, though, with the infamous snake episode (9.749-854), a scene of herpetological carnage that he renders with Quentin Tarantino-esque intensity and absurdity.
"W.R. Johnson, a critic who has been most willing to find the dark humor in Lucan's poetry, situates the work accordingly as a 'unique fusion of high seriousness with an especially bitter kind of satire fueled by vehement sarcasm' and takes the reader though the greatest its of modern Lucian criticism—anti-heroics, Olympian omissions, the poet's relationship to Nero, the poem's 'ending'—with an eye to this fusion."
—Patrick J. Burns, Institute for the Study of the Ancient World, in Classical World
"There is much to like about this translation. I commend Walters especially for his excellent ear for 21st century American idiom and diction and the way this helps to create a powerfully simple and clear translation. . . . Walters includes welcome supplementary material, such as a full glossary and a helpful book-by-book structural synopsis. In addition, W.R. Johnson's introduction is provocative and revealing, dealing specifically with the dangerous world of Neronian Rome, Lucan's atypical approach to the gods and the hero, and the Civil War's diverse narrative styles. . . . A welcome option for the classroom [that] may just help hook new fans on Post-Augustan epic."
—Stephen M. Kirshner, Austin Peay State University, in CJ-Online
ISBN: 9781603849968
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 369g
304 pages