Class and Gender in the Opposition to Nero

IF 0.5 3区 历史学 0 CLASSICS
HELIOS Pub Date : 2020-02-21 DOI:10.1353/hel.2019.0008
Caitlin C. Gillespie
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Abstract:This article investigates how class and gender figure in Nero's use of violence to obtain or manipulate information through analyzing two episodes in Tacitus's An. 14.59–64 and 15.51–57. In each case, women of varying social statuses become models of constantia under extreme physical duress. In the first instance, Octavia's servant women refuse to lie about their mistress's chastity and thus provide Nero with a legitimate rationale for his divorce. In the second, the freedwoman Epicharis staunchly refuses to inform against her co-conspirators involved in the Pisonian conspiracy. Tacitus uses these episodes to reflect upon the few, ennobling forms of resistance to Nero, and to provide female parallels to the Stoic opposition of Thrasea Paetus. Furthermore, both episodes illustrate Tacitus's concern with the freedom of speech (libertas) during the reign of a tyrant. Tacitus, at a loss for many models among elite men, finds incorruptible exempla in lower-class women.
反对尼禄的阶级与性别
摘要:本文通过分析塔西陀《安》14.59-64和15.51-57中的两个情节,探讨了尼禄利用暴力获取或操纵信息的阶级和性别形象。在每一种情况下,不同社会地位的妇女都会在极端的身体胁迫下成为持续痴呆症的典型。在第一次审判中,奥克塔维亚的仆人拒绝在情妇的贞洁问题上撒谎,从而为尼禄的离婚提供了正当的理由。在第二部中,自由女性伊壁沙里斯坚决拒绝告发参与皮森阴谋的同谋。塔西陀利用这些情节来反思对尼禄的少数、崇高的抵抗形式,并将女性与斯多葛派反对色雷斯·帕埃图斯相提并论。此外,这两集都说明了塔西陀在暴君统治期间对言论自由的关注。塔西陀在精英男性中失去了许多榜样,在下层女性中找到了廉洁的榜样。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
HELIOS
HELIOS CLASSICS-
CiteScore
0.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
4
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