Machiavelli’s Catilinarian Oration

IF 0.3 3区 历史学 0 CLASSICS
POLIS Pub Date : 2023-02-06 DOI:10.1163/20512996-12340394
John T. Scott
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

In the Discourses on Livy, Machiavelli claims that writers who are afraid to condemn Caesar instead criticize Catiline. I argue that Machiavelli follows this advice by inverting it. He openly condemns Caesar and the empire he founded while signaling that he has in mind another inimical example: the Church. He signals his intention by echoing Cicero’s fourth Catilinarian oration, imitating Cicero’s image of the ruin of Rome if Catiline’s conspiracy were to succeed through his own vision of the Italy wrought by wicked Roman emperors who succeeded Caesar. The reader of Machiavelli who recognizes this echo is in a position to see Machiavelli’s own Catilinarian oration against another successor of Caesar. In making my argument, I draw on Rex Stem’s treatment of the functions of exemplementarity as employed by authors of texts and as received by their readers.
在《论李维》中,马基雅维利声称,害怕谴责凯撒的作家反而批评了卡提林。我认为,马基雅维利遵循了这个建议,只是把它颠倒过来。他公开谴责凯撒和他建立的帝国,同时暗示他想到了另一个不利的例子:教会。他通过呼应西塞罗的第四次卡提林演说来表达他的意图,模仿西塞罗的形象,即如果卡提林的阴谋通过他自己对继承凯撒的邪恶罗马皇帝所创造的意大利的看法而成功,那么罗马就会毁灭。马基雅维利的读者,如果认识到这种呼应,就能看到马基雅维利自己的,卡提林演说,反对另一个凯撒的继任者。在提出我的论点时,我借鉴了雷克斯·斯特恩(Rex Stem)对文本作者所使用和读者所接受的范例功能的处理。
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来源期刊
POLIS
POLIS CLASSICS-
CiteScore
0.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
33
审稿时长
7 weeks
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