Available Formats
Confronting Identities in the Roman Empire: Assumptions about the Other in Literary Evidence
By (Author) Jos Lus Brando
Edited by Cludia Teixeira
Edited by lia Rodrigues
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
26th June 2025
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Ancient Greek and Roman literature
Social groups, communities and identities
Ancient religions and Mythologies
870.9353
Paperback
384
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
Drawing together new research from emerging and senior scholars, this open-access volume presents an up-to-date discussion of these notions in the ancient world, both at the individual and community level. This open access edited volume offers insights into how ancient texts, ranging from the historical and biographical to the oratorical and epistolary, demonstrate the negotiation and renegotiation of otherness, identity and culture. Roman identity emerged as the result of multiple interactions with real and imagined Others. This volume analyses specific case studies and networks of inclusion and transformation that informed concepts of unity, otherness and cultural identity. In part one, contributors discuss Roman perceptions of communal identity, considering ethnic, geographical, religious, occupational and social factors that informed various ideas of belonging and exclusion. Part two goes further by examining ancient texts from the perspectives of non-Romans, in addition to famous Roman figures who deviated from traditional models of identity. The ebook editions of this book are available under a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 licence on bloomsburycollections.com.
Jos Lus Brando is Associate Professor in Classic Studies at the University of Coimbra, Portugal, and Researcher at the Centre for Classic and Humanistic Studies (CECH) and PI of the BioRom Project (2018-22). Cludia Teixeira is Associate Professor of Literature at the University of vora, Portugal, and Researcher at the Centre for Classic and Humanistic Studies (CECH), University of Coimbra and co-PI of the BioRom Project (2018-22). lia Rodrigues is Researcher at the Centre for Classic and Humanistic Studies (CECH), University of Coimbra, Portugal and Postdoctoral Fellow of the BioRom Project (2018-21).