ABSTRACT
In this interdisciplinary volume, a team of classicists, historians, and archaeologists examines how the memory of the infamous emperor Nero was negotiated in different contexts and by different people during the ensuing Flavian age of imperial Rome. The contributions show different Flavian responses to Nero’s complicated legacy: while some aspects of his memory were reinforced, others were erased. Emphasizing the constant and diverse nature of this negotiation, this book proposes a nuanced interpretation of both the Flavian age itself and its relation to Nero’s Rome. By combining the study of these strategies with architectural approaches, archaeology, and memory studies, this volume offers a multifaceted picture of Roman civilization at a crucial turning point, and as such will have something to offer anyone interested in classics, (ancient) history, and archaeology.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|56 pages
Family Matters
part II|73 pages
Building on Nero's Rome
part III|81 pages
Literary Responses to Nero's Rome
chapter 7|22 pages
Imitatio, aemulatio, and Ludic Allusion: Channelling Lucan in Statius' Thebaid 1.114–164
part IV|79 pages
Presenting the Emperor in Early Imperial Rome
chapter 9|39 pages
How to Portray the princeps: Visual Imperial Representation from Nero to Domitian
chapter 10|37 pages
Iuvenis infandi ingeni scelerum capaxque: Flavian Responses to Nero's Youth
part V|27 pages
Looking Back
