The thesis explores the meaning and function of tears in Roman political culture during the Republic and the Early Empire in various historical settings: mourning, the law court, and in different political contexts where power, authority, and subjection were expressed or exercised. This is carried through by reading representations of weeping in Greek and Latin literary works in different genres, written by different authors. The study demonstrates that while tears and weeping were a common occurrence in Roman politics, the appropriateness and meaning of tears varied by literary context and variables in the historical context (like status, gender, and communicative context). The study also discusses the question of change over and time and ...
The purpose of this study is to illuminate the nature of legislative reform and its intertwining rel...
This thesis provides a social history of the plebeian and curule aedileships of the Roman republic. ...
Rhetoric was fundamental to education and to cultural aspiration in the Greek and Roman worlds. It w...
This dissertation examines the sociopolitical dynamics of anger in Roman public life during the late...
This thesis examines representations of Roman female suicide in a variety of genres and periods from...
The paper examines a number of Roman literary texts (by Ennius, Cicero, Vergil, Ovid, Seneca the You...
The present paper is the first part of a series of articles dedicated to the concept of tragedy in t...
This thesis examines representations of illness in Roman society of the late republic and early impe...
This paper argues the institution of Roman bathing was an instrument of cultural hegemony, which all...
This thesis examines the representation of weeping rulers in early medieval sources, focusing on the...
The aim of this thesis is to define and explore the nature of pollution and purity in pre-Christian ...
At the death of Germanicus in 19 CE, the behaviour of the emperor Tiberius came under scrutiny. How ...
This chapter investigates how the empress Livia is represented as mourning figure in Latin literatur...
Tear-stained cheeks, dishevelled hair, bloodied breasts and dark clothing transformed the body to gi...
This dissertation discusses the interaction of mythology and power in the Roman Republic and early P...
The purpose of this study is to illuminate the nature of legislative reform and its intertwining rel...
This thesis provides a social history of the plebeian and curule aedileships of the Roman republic. ...
Rhetoric was fundamental to education and to cultural aspiration in the Greek and Roman worlds. It w...
This dissertation examines the sociopolitical dynamics of anger in Roman public life during the late...
This thesis examines representations of Roman female suicide in a variety of genres and periods from...
The paper examines a number of Roman literary texts (by Ennius, Cicero, Vergil, Ovid, Seneca the You...
The present paper is the first part of a series of articles dedicated to the concept of tragedy in t...
This thesis examines representations of illness in Roman society of the late republic and early impe...
This paper argues the institution of Roman bathing was an instrument of cultural hegemony, which all...
This thesis examines the representation of weeping rulers in early medieval sources, focusing on the...
The aim of this thesis is to define and explore the nature of pollution and purity in pre-Christian ...
At the death of Germanicus in 19 CE, the behaviour of the emperor Tiberius came under scrutiny. How ...
This chapter investigates how the empress Livia is represented as mourning figure in Latin literatur...
Tear-stained cheeks, dishevelled hair, bloodied breasts and dark clothing transformed the body to gi...
This dissertation discusses the interaction of mythology and power in the Roman Republic and early P...
The purpose of this study is to illuminate the nature of legislative reform and its intertwining rel...
This thesis provides a social history of the plebeian and curule aedileships of the Roman republic. ...
Rhetoric was fundamental to education and to cultural aspiration in the Greek and Roman worlds. It w...