This book explores Lucan's highly original deployment of contradictory Greco-Roman stereotypes about Egypt (utopian vs. xenophobic) as a means of reflecting on the violent tensions within his own society (conservatism vs. Caesarism). Lucan shows the two distinct facets of first-century BC Egypt, namely its ancient Pharaonic heritage and its latter-day Hellenistic culture under the Ptolemies, not only in spiritual conflict with one another (via the opposed characters of Acoreus, priest of old Memphis, and the Alexandrian courtier Pothinus) but also inextricably entangled with the corresponding factions of the Roman civil war and of Nero's Rome. Dr Tracy also connects Lucan's portrayal of Egypt and the Nile to his critical engagement with Greco-Roman discourse on natural science, particularly the Naturales Quaestiones of his uncle Seneca the Younger. Lastly, he examines Lucan's attitude toward the value of cultural diversity within the increasingly monocultural environment of the Roman Mediterranean.
Explores how a cultural clash between traditional Pharaonic and latter-day Ptolemaic Egypt is used to mirror the Roman civil war.About the AuthorJonathan Tracy is Assistant Professor in the Department of Classics at the University of Toronto. He has published widely on Lucan and Egypt and is currently working on a second book, on the evolution of Roman attitudes toward the decline and fall of Pharaonic Egypt from Virgil and the Actium generation of Roman poets to Menander Protector and Theophylact Simocatta, the final classicizing historians of late antiquity.
Book InformationISBN 9781107072077
Author Jonathan TracyFormat Hardback
Page Count 302
Imprint Cambridge University PressPublisher Cambridge University Press
Weight(grams) 620g
Dimensions(mm) 235mm * 160mm * 20mm