Civil War and the Collapse of the Social Bond

The Roman Tradition at the Heart of the Modern

Barbara Vinken author Michèle Lowrie author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Cambridge University Press

Published:13th Oct '22

£90.00

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Civil War and the Collapse of the Social Bond cover

The Roman tradition represents civil war as a political matter that cuts to the heart of family, sexuality, and society.

Representations of civil war in classical and Christian Latin and their reception in French literature reveal the formative influence of the Roman civil wars on the modern imagination. Optimistic solutions defer resolution beyond the end of history. Within history, a decadent empire resolves republican discord at a terrible price.Can civil war ever be overcome? Can a better order come into being? This book explores how the Roman civil wars of the first century BCE laid the template for addressing perennially urgent questions. The Roman Republic's collapse and Augustus' new Empire have remained ideological battlegrounds to this day. Integrative and disintegrative readings begun in antiquity (Vergil and Lucan) have left their mark on answers given by Christians (Augustine), secular republicans (Victor Hugo), and disillusioned satirists (Michel Houellebecq) alike. France's self-understanding as a new Rome – republican during the Revolution, imperial under successive Napoleons – makes it a special case in the Roman tradition. The same story returns repeatedly. A golden age of restoration glimmers on the horizon, but comes in the guise of a decadent, oriental empire that reintroduces and exposes everything already wrong under the defunct republic. Central to the price of social order is patriarchy's need to subjugate women.

ISBN: 9781316516447

Dimensions: 237mm x 159mm x 25mm

Weight: 700g

360 pages