This volume presents an innovative picture of the ancient Mediterranean world. Approaching poverty as a multifaceted condition, it examines how different groups were affected by the lack of access to symbolic, cultural and social – as well as economic – capital.
Collecting a wide range of studies by an international team of experts, it presents a diverse and complex analysis of life in antiquity, from the archaic to the late antique period. The sections on Greece, Rome, and Late Antiquity offer in-depth studies of ancient life, integrating analysis of socio-economic dynamics and cultural and discursive strategies that shaped this crucial element of ancient (and modern) societies. Themes like social cohesion and control, exclusion, gender, agency, and identity are explored through the combination of archaeological, epigraphic, and literary evidence, presenting a rich panorama of Greco-Roman societies and a stimulating collection of new approaches and methodologies for their understanding. The book offers a comprehensive view of the ancient world, analysing different social groups – from wealthy elites to poor peasants and the destitute – and their interactions, in contexts as diverse as Classical Athens and Sparta, imperial Rome, and the late antique towns of Egypt and North Africa.
Poverty in Ancient Greece and Rome: Discourses and Realities is a valuable resource for students and scholars of ancient history, classical literature, and archaeology. In addition, topics covered in the book are of interest to social scientists, scholars of religion, and historians working on poverty and social history in other periods.
Author(s): Filippo Carlà-Uhink, Lucia Cecchet, Carlos Machado
Series: Routledge Monographs in Classical Studies
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2022
Language: English
Pages: 315
City: London
Cover
Half Title
Series Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
List of Figures
Chapter 1 Introduction
Part I Greece
Chapter 2 Poverty, Wealth, and Social Mobility: The Cases of Megara and Athens
Chapter 3 Processes of Impoverishment: Bau Z in the Kerameikos and Discourses About Poverty
Chapter 4 Poverty and Honour in Classical Sparta
Chapter 5 Greedy Gods and Hungry Humans: Sacrifice and the Poor in Classical and Hellenistic Greece
Chapter 6 Poverty and Truth in Ancient Greek Philosophy
Part II Rome
Chapter 7 Impoverished Senatorial Women in Mid-Republican Rome: Opima Gloria and Felix Paupertas?
Chapter 8 The Dynamics of Shame: Elite Poverty in Late Republican and Early Imperial Discourse
Chapter 9 Cicero, the Poor, and Roman Rhetoric
Chapter 10 Rich and Hungry, Poor and Full: Social and Cultural Food Poverty in the Roman World
Part III Late Antiquity
Chapter 11 Not All Poverty Is to Be Praised: Defining the Poor in a Christian Roman Empire
Chapter 12 Looking for the Poor in Late Antique Rome
Chapter 13 The “Poor” Facing Late Antique Justice: The Cases from the Papyri
Chapter 14 Poverty, Charity, and the Social Strategies of “the Poor” in Late Antiquity: The View from North Africa in the Age of Augustine
Index