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Rome's Patron - by Emily Gowers
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Highlights
- The story of Maecenas and his role in the evolution and continuing legacy of ancient Roman poetry and culture An unelected statesman with exceptional powers, a patron of the arts and a luxury-loving friend of the emperor Augustus: Maecenas was one of the most prominent and distinctive personalities of ancient Rome.
- About the Author: Emily Gowers is professor of Latin literature and a fellow of St John's College at the University of Cambridge.
- 488 Pages
- Literary Criticism, Ancient & Classical
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Book Synopsis
The story of Maecenas and his role in the evolution and continuing legacy of ancient Roman poetry and culture
An unelected statesman with exceptional powers, a patron of the arts and a luxury-loving friend of the emperor Augustus: Maecenas was one of the most prominent and distinctive personalities of ancient Rome. Yet the traces he left behind are unreliable and tantalizingly scarce. Rather than attempting a conventional biography, Emily Gowers shows in Rome's Patron that it is possible to tell a different story, one about Maecenas's influence, his changing identities and the many narratives attached to him across two millennia.
Rome's Patron explores Maecenas's appearances in the central works of Augustan poetry written in his name--Virgil's Georgics, Horace's Odes and Propertius's elegies--and in later works of Latin literature that reassess his influence. For the Roman poets he supported, Maecenas was a mascot of cultural flexibility and innovation, a pioneer of gender fluidity and a bearer of imperial demands who could be exposed as a secret sympathizer with their own values. For those excluded from his circle, he represented either favouritism and indulgence or the lost ideal of a patron in perfect collaboration with the authors he championed.
As Gowers shows, Maecenas had and continues to have a unique cachet--in the fantasies that still surround the gardens, buildings and objects so tenuously associated with him; in literature, from Ariosto and Ben Johnson to Phillis Wheatley and W. B. Yeats; and in philanthropy, where his name has been surprisingly adaptable to more democratic forms of patronage.
Review Quotes
"The most in-depth study ever published on the mercurial figure at the heart of power in the early years of the Roman Empire. . . . Gowers brings the richness of all this alive for the reader, in a book that Maecenas himself would have welcomed into his library."---Cliff Cunningham, Sun News Austin
"This [is] an exceptional book, the product of vast reading combined with high scholarship--and . . . readability. It would be an impertinence for the reviewer (whose knowledge of Maecenas has been immeasurably widened by Emily Gowers) merely to recommend it: it deserves to be bought widely throughout the respublica litterarum."---Colin Leach, Classics for All
About the Author
Emily Gowers is professor of Latin literature and a fellow of St John's College at the University of Cambridge. She is the author of The Loaded Table: Representations of Food in Roman Literature and the editor of Horace: Satires Book I.