Reviews
Evoking the Dead investigates something big at the heart of what we call Latin literature: the making of Roman memory. Martin Bloomer's brilliant synthesis provocatively reframes familiar works of the Latin literary canon as acts of 'rhetorical necromancy' aimed at summoning back to life memories of the Roman dead.
In this study, Martin Bloomer delivers a powerful account of how Roman authors of the late Republic and early Empire conceptualised and mobilised memory in response to political, social, and individual pressures. Through incisive close readings and a wide-ranging approach, this book redefines Roman memory culture and invites us to rethink literary memory more broadly.
Book Details
Introduction
1. Preliminaries: The Signs of Memory
2. Listening to Cato: Texts and Testimony
3. Varro's Etymologizing: Remembering the Community of Latin Words
4. The Parade of the Memorable
5. The Limits
Introduction
1. Preliminaries: The Signs of Memory
2. Listening to Cato: Texts and Testimony
3. Varro's Etymologizing: Remembering the Community of Latin Words
4. The Parade of the Memorable
5. The Limits of the Memorable: The Rhetorical Census of Valerius Maximus
6. Transit Admiratio: Memoria, Invidia, and the Historian
Afterword
Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index