Tacitus Reviewed (Record no. 575371)

MARC details
000 -LEADER
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008 - FIXED-LENGTH DATA ELEMENTS--GENERAL INFORMATION
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020 ## - INTERNATIONAL STANDARD BOOK NUMBER
ISBN 9780198152583
082 ## - DEWEY DECIMAL CLASSIFICATION NUMBER
Classification number 937.07
Item number WOO
100 ## - MAIN ENTRY--AUTHOR NAME
Personal name Woodman, Anthony John
245 #0 - TITLE STATEMENT
Title Tacitus Reviewed
260 ## - PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC. (IMPRINT)
Name of publisher Oxford University Press
Year of publication 1998
300 ## - PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION
Number of Pages 282 pages
500 ## - GENERAL NOTE
General note Tacitus, writing early in the second century AD, is acknowledged to be ancient Rome's greatest historian; his Annals, describing the emperors from Tiberius to Nero (AD 14 - 68), is his greatest work. This book gathers together Professor Woodman's writings on Tacitus over the past twenty-five years, focusing almost exclusively on the AnnalsR. He starts from, and argues for, the basic premiss that, as a historian, Tacitus must be seen in ancient rather than in modern terms. The Annals is a literary text of immense subtlety and acknowledged difficulty and complexity; it is also a very familiar text, read and reread by generations of scholars who want to find out about the Roman empire. One of Professor Woodman's principal contentions is that, through familiarity, these readers have misread significant passages of the text, thereby gaining and perpetuating a distorted view of what Tacitus has to say, especially about Tiberius. This distorted view is revealed, and the true meaning disclosed, by minute and detailed literary analysis. The author offers radically new or different interpretations of some of the most famous passages: the murder of Agrippa Postumus, the notorious accession debate of Tiberius, Tacitus' statement of the so-called `highest function of history', Tiberius' obituary, Nero's debauched water-borne party, and the Pisonian conspiracy against Nero in AD 65. There is also discussion of major narrative sections of Books 1 and 4, concentrating on such matters as structure, vivid representation, imitation and allusion, and dramatic and generic manipulation of the narrative. The new interpretations have profound implications for those who wish to use Tacitus' Annals as a source for what happened in the first century AD.
650 ## - SUBJECT ADDED ENTRY--TOPICAL TERM
Topical Term History
942 ## - ADDED ENTRY ELEMENTS (KOHA)
Koha item type English Books
Holdings
Withdrawn status Lost status Damaged status Not for loan Home library Current library Shelving location Date acquired Full call number Accession Number Price effective from Koha item type
        Anna Centenary Library Anna Centenary Library 7TH FLOOR, B WING 10.07.2025 937.07 WOO 281420 10.07.2025 English Books

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