Political Communication in the Roman WorldThis volume aims to address the question of political communication in the Roman world. What constitutes political communication in the Roman world? In what ways could information be transmitted and represented? What mechanisms made political communication successful or unsuccessful? |
What people are saying - Write a review
We haven't found any reviews in the usual places.
Contents
Introduction | 1 |
Part 1 Speech and Mechanisms of Political Communication | 15 |
Part 2 Political Communication at a Distance | 53 |
Part 3 Political Communication a Bottomup Approach | 137 |
Part 4 Failure of Political Communication | 179 |
Part 5 Representations of Political Communication | 229 |
279 | |
283 | |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
adlegatio Agrippa Postumus Aldrin Ancient Rome anti-Caesarians Antium Antonius Atticus Bibulus Blom Brill Brutus Caelius Caes Caesar Cambridge University Press Catherine Steel Cato Cicero Cicero’s letters Ciceronian circulation Claudius Clodius consul consulship contiones Cortés-Copete Courrier Crassus Culture Curio Dialogus de oratoribus discussion Domitian École française edited elite emperor Empire epigrams exile Formiae française de Rome Francisco Pina Polo Frumentarii Greek Hadrian Henriette Hölkeskamp Karl-Joachim la rumeur Late Republic Late Roman Republic Leiden Lintott literary Marcellus Mart Martial Martin Jehne Metellus Morstein-Marx Oxford University Press Paris petition plèbe Plebs Pliny Pliny’s Plut political communication Pollio Pompey Pompey’s Publius Clodius Pulcher Quintilian republican orators Republican Rome rhetorical role Roma Roman Political Roman Republic römischen Republik Senate senatorial senatus consultum ultimum Shatzman siècle social Sociologie politique Steiner Verlag Studies Stuttgart Suet Tacitean rumours Tacitus Tiberius tion Trajan tribune Velleius violence καὶ