ABSTRACT

If ancient history is particularly susceptible to a top-down approach, due to the nature of our evidence and its traditional exploitation by modern scholars, another ancient history—‘from below’—is actually possible. This volume examines the possibilities and challenges involved in writing it.

Despite undeniable advances in recent decades, ‘our slowness to reconstruct plausible visions of almost any aspect of society beyond the top-most strata of wealth, power or status’ (as Nicholas Purcell has put it) remains a persistent feature of the field. Therefore, this book concerns a historical field and social groups that are still today neglected by modern scholarship. However, writing ancient history ‘from below’ means much more than taking into account the anonymous masses, the subaltern classes and the non-elites. Our task is also, in the felicitous expression coined by Walter Benjamin, ‘to brush history against the grain,’ to rescue the viewpoint of the subordinated, the traditions of the oppressed. In other words, we should understand the bulk of ancient populations in light of their own experience and their own reactions to that experience. But, how do we do such a history? What sources can we use? What methods and approaches can we employ? What concepts are required to this endeavour? The contributions mainly engage with questions of theory and methodology, but they also constitute inspiring case studies in their own right, ranging from classical Greece to the late antique world.

This book is aimed not only at readers working on classical Greece, republican and imperial Rome and late antiquity but at anyone interested in ‘bottom-up’ history and social and population history in general. Although the book is primarily intended for scholars, it will also appeal to graduate and undergraduate students of history, archaeology and classical studies.

chapter 1|31 pages

Ancient history from below

An introduction

part 1|46 pages

Who is below?

chapter 2|20 pages

Subaltern community formation in antiquity

Some methodological reflections

chapter 3|24 pages

Southern Gaul from below

The limits and possibilities of epigraphic documentation

part 2|76 pages

Experiences of poverty, dependency and work

chapter 4|23 pages

Poverty, debt and dependent labour in the ancient Greek world

Thinking through some issues in doing ancient history from below

chapter 5|18 pages

Destitute, homeless and (almost) invisible

Urban poverty and the rental market in the Roman world

chapter 6|33 pages

Roman agriculture from above and below

Words and things

part 3|37 pages

Gender, ethnicity and subalternity

chapter 7|18 pages

Hellenicity from below

Subalternity and ethnicity in classical Greece and beyond

chapter 8|17 pages

Subaltern masculinities

Pompeian graffiti and excluded memories in the early Principate

part 4|92 pages

Politics from below

chapter 9|21 pages

Metics, slaves and citizens in classical Athens

Rethinking the polis from below

chapter 10|21 pages

What is below?

The case of the Athenian riot of 508/7 BC

chapter 11|17 pages

Slave agency in Livy's history of Rome

Between rebellion and counterconspiracy

chapter 12|24 pages

The crowd in late antiquity

Problems and possibilities of an inquiry

chapter |7 pages

Epilogue

Agency, past, present and future