This paper examines an ancient Roman ceremony, the Triumph, and explains the effect this ritual had on Roman civilization during the Empire and the effects it still has on our historical interpretation of that society. Using Erving Goffman’s theory of dramaturgy, I compare the leaders of Rome to actors on a stage playing to an audience. In this paper, I argue that the Triumph, which was a ceremony dedicated to the creation of a “God amongst men” in a conquering general, fueled a reciprocal relationship between the actions of society and the way in which we remember the Empire. Achieving a record in historical texts was the primary goal for those who sought immortality; and to attain this they had to be uncommon in a world of commoners. Thus...
This dissertation examines how ancient Romans dealt with the innumerable military losses that the ex...
This dissertation explores the arrival of Roman rulers and those men who impersonated them at cities...
The power to define and characterize various groups, as well as those individuals commonly associate...
The triumphal procession staged Roman conquest and supremacy, featuring the defeated ‘other’ as oppo...
The Romans had an expectation that every new initiative, and indeed every war, would end in victory,...
My dissertation employs a range of interdisciplinary methods to produce a diachronic narrative of th...
This thesis explores the use of narrative patterns in Herodian’s History of the Roman Empire (third ...
This article examines what the historians have called the “imperial cult” to describe a wide variety...
Humanities: 2nd Place (The Ohio State University Edward F. Hayes Graduate Research Forum)Between 218...
The paper investigates the way in which Roman leaders, during the classical and Renaissance periods,...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2017-03This dissertation explores the intersection between...
There are three main scholarly approaches to the mechanisms by which the military record of Roman Re...
This dissertation examines the history of elite male youth in the Roman Empire from 218 BCE to 68 CE...
In this paper I argue that Philo’s Embassy to Gaius makes use of the literary paradigm of theatrical...
My PhD analyses the imperial “admission” (the so-called “salutatio” and “adoratio”) from the Severan...
This dissertation examines how ancient Romans dealt with the innumerable military losses that the ex...
This dissertation explores the arrival of Roman rulers and those men who impersonated them at cities...
The power to define and characterize various groups, as well as those individuals commonly associate...
The triumphal procession staged Roman conquest and supremacy, featuring the defeated ‘other’ as oppo...
The Romans had an expectation that every new initiative, and indeed every war, would end in victory,...
My dissertation employs a range of interdisciplinary methods to produce a diachronic narrative of th...
This thesis explores the use of narrative patterns in Herodian’s History of the Roman Empire (third ...
This article examines what the historians have called the “imperial cult” to describe a wide variety...
Humanities: 2nd Place (The Ohio State University Edward F. Hayes Graduate Research Forum)Between 218...
The paper investigates the way in which Roman leaders, during the classical and Renaissance periods,...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2017-03This dissertation explores the intersection between...
There are three main scholarly approaches to the mechanisms by which the military record of Roman Re...
This dissertation examines the history of elite male youth in the Roman Empire from 218 BCE to 68 CE...
In this paper I argue that Philo’s Embassy to Gaius makes use of the literary paradigm of theatrical...
My PhD analyses the imperial “admission” (the so-called “salutatio” and “adoratio”) from the Severan...
This dissertation examines how ancient Romans dealt with the innumerable military losses that the ex...
This dissertation explores the arrival of Roman rulers and those men who impersonated them at cities...
The power to define and characterize various groups, as well as those individuals commonly associate...