Time’s Path and The Historian’s Agency: Morality and Memory in Sallust’s Bellum Catilinae

IF 0.1 0 PHILOSOPHY
A. Seider
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Abstract

This article focuses on two interrelated themes that structure and fracture much of Sallust’s monograph: time and morality. Driven by a strong narrative voice, vivid representations of its characters’ speeches, and an innovative historiographical structure, the Bellum Catilinae imagines moral progress and decline from often-contradictory perspectives, with its narrative riven by the same asymmetry and variation that characterizes the author’s Latin. Here, by considering several elements of Sallust’s Preface and subsequent narrative of the conspiracy, I argue that Sallust challenges his readers’ expectations about temporal structures and ultimately creates an atmosphere akin to that of a temporal civil war, where the moral value of memory loses its mooring and time’s movement threatens to become meaningless. No longer, in other words, does the memory of earlier events prompt the performance of similarly virtuous actions in the present, and no longer can Rome’s path be imagined to proceed upwards from the valorous deeds of its current citizens. Divided into two main sections, the paper considers first how Sallust offers a tentative hope for Rome’s future in his Preface and early depictions of Catiline’s conspiracy and then how those glimpses of optimism are utterly undone as the narrative proceeds. In Sallust’s descriptions of Rome’s origins, his own reasons for writings, and Catiline’s impact on the Romans, he portrays both the conspiracy and his own record of it as the kind of forces that could prompt Rome to return to its earlier glory. In the second half of the paper, I claim that this possibility is destroyed in Sallust’s construction of the speeches of Catiline, Caesar, and Cato. Each of these figures exploits the rhetorical power inherent in examples from the past, but they do so in strikingly different ways and for strikingly different reasons. The juxtaposition of their speeches shows the essentially malleable nature of memory, both in terms of its moral impact and its relationship to past events.
时间的路径与历史学家的能动性:萨洛斯特《卡提利纳战争》中的道德与记忆
本文关注两个相互关联的主题,这两个主题构成并破坏了萨罗斯特的大部分专著:时间和道德。在强烈的叙事声音、人物演讲的生动表现和创新的历史结构的推动下,《卡提利纳战争》从经常相互矛盾的角度想象道德的进步和衰落,其叙事也被作者拉丁语的不对称和变化所分裂。在这里,通过考虑萨卢斯特的序言和随后对阴谋的叙述中的几个元素,我认为萨卢斯特挑战了他的读者对时间结构的期望,并最终创造了一种类似于暂时内战的气氛,在这种气氛中,记忆的道德价值失去了它的锚,时间的运动有变得毫无意义的危险。换句话说,对早期事件的记忆不再促使人们在当下采取类似的美德行为,也不再能想象罗马的道路会从其当前公民的英勇行为中向前发展。论文分为两个主要部分,首先考虑萨卢斯特如何在他的序言中为罗马的未来提供了一个试探性的希望以及对卡提林阴谋的早期描述,然后这些乐观主义是如何随着叙事的进行而完全消失的。在萨罗斯特对罗马起源的描述中,他自己写作的理由,以及卡提林对罗马人的影响,他把阴谋和他自己对它的记录都描绘成一种力量,可以促使罗马恢复早期的辉煌。在本文的后半部分,我主张这种可能性在萨洛斯特对卡提林、凯撒和加图演讲的建构中被摧毁了。这些人物都利用了过去例子中固有的修辞力量,但他们的方式和原因却截然不同。他们的演讲并置显示了记忆本质上的可塑性,无论是在道德影响方面,还是在与过去事件的关系方面。
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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