>
Man and Animal in Severan Rome: The Literary Imagination of Claudius Aelianus (Greek Culture in the Roman World)

Man and Animal in Severan Rome: The Literary Imagination of Claudius Aelianus (Greek Culture in the Roman World)

  • £26.49
  • Save £52


Steven D. Smith
Cambridge University Press
Edition: Illustrated, 7/24/2014
EAN 9781107033986, ISBN10: 1107033985

Hardcover, 310 pages, 22.9 x 15.7 x 2 cm
Language: English

The Roman sophist Claudius Aelianus, born in Praeneste in the late second century CE, spent his career cultivating a Greek literary persona. Aelian was a highly regarded writer during his own lifetime, and his literary compilations would be influential for a thousand years and more in the Roman world. This book argues that the De natura animalium, a miscellaneous treasury of animal lore and Aelian's greatest work, is a sophisticated literary critique of Severan Rome. Aelian's fascination with animals reflects the cultural issues of his day: philosophy, religion, the exoticism of Egypt and India, sex, gender, and imperial politics. This study also considers how Aelian's interests in the De natura animalium are echoed in his other works, the Rustic Letters and the Varia Historia. Himself a prominent figure of mainstream Roman Hellenism, Aelian refined his literary aesthetic to produce a reading of nature that is both moral and provocative.

Introduction. Approaching the De natura animalium
1. The independent intellectual
2. Animals and agroikoi in Aelian's Rustic Letters
3. The hazards of variety
4. The Hellenized Roman
5. Stoicism
6. Animals, divinity, and myth
7. Egypt and India
8. The sexual animal
9. Bees, lions, eagles
Aelian and kingship
10. After animals
the women of the Varia Historia
Conclusion. 'Nature produces animals with many voices and many sounds, you might say ...'
Appendix
reconstructing Aelian's Katêgoria tou Gunnidos.