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Civil war, parricide, and the sword in Silius Italicus’s Punica

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Resumo:Silius’s representation of dynasty, parricide, and the imagery of the ensis and sceptrum in the Punica comprises the focus of this chapter. Parricide emerges from Silius’s epic as the paradigmatic crime of civil war, revealing a particularly Flavian preoccupation with the role of discordia within familial and perhaps even dynastic systems. Within the Punica, the ensis and the sceptrum become interlocked images which foreground the violent potential embedded within Rome’s imperial structure. This image system is part of a wider, coherent, and yet still not often recognized strategy on Silius’s part to both distance the nefas of civil war from Flavian pax while simultaneously destabilizing that very distancing strategy.
Autores principais:Dominik, William J.
Assunto:Silius Italicus Punica Civil war Parricide Sword
Ano:2018
País:Portugal
Tipo de documento:capítulo de livro
Tipo de acesso:acesso restrito
Instituição associada:Universidade de Lisboa
Idioma:inglês
Origem:Repositório da Universidade de Lisboa
Descrição
Resumo:Silius’s representation of dynasty, parricide, and the imagery of the ensis and sceptrum in the Punica comprises the focus of this chapter. Parricide emerges from Silius’s epic as the paradigmatic crime of civil war, revealing a particularly Flavian preoccupation with the role of discordia within familial and perhaps even dynastic systems. Within the Punica, the ensis and the sceptrum become interlocked images which foreground the violent potential embedded within Rome’s imperial structure. This image system is part of a wider, coherent, and yet still not often recognized strategy on Silius’s part to both distance the nefas of civil war from Flavian pax while simultaneously destabilizing that very distancing strategy.