Fiction and Education in the Roman World
The Cultivation of the Reader
Jacqueline Arthur-Montagne author
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Publishing:30th Apr '26
£44.00
This title is due to be published on 30th April, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

Offers a new understanding of fiction in the Roman world as a sociocultural practice governed by institutions of literary learning.
Reveals how fiction was taught and reimagined in the Roman world. Bridging elite education and popular storytelling, it shows how the ancient novel both emerged from and satirized the literary training that shaped Roman cultural life. For classicists, literary theorists, and anyone interested in ancient education.What was fiction in the Roman world – and how did ancient readers learn to make sense of it? This book redefines ancient fiction not as a genre but as a sociocultural practice, governed by the institutions of Greco-Roman education. Drawing on modern fiction theory, it uncovers how fables, epic, and rhetorical training cultivated “fiction competence” in readers from childhood through advanced studies. But it also reveals how the ancient novels – including Greek romance, fictional biography, and the fragmentary novels – subverted the very rules of fiction pedagogy they inherited. Through incisive close readings of a wide array of canonical and paraliterary texts, this book reframes the classical curriculum as the engine of literary imagination in antiquity. For classicists, literary theorists, and anyone interested in ancient education, it offers a provocative reassessment of fiction's place in cultural history – and of how readers learned to believe, disbelieve, and decode narrative meaning.
ISBN: 9781009721653
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
500 pages