Available Formats
Tacitean Visual Narrative
By (Author) Philip Waddell
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
12th November 2020
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
History of art
Ancient, classical and medieval texts
Film history, theory or criticism
937.07
Hardback
256
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
535g
Combining the studies of modern film, traditional narratology, and Roman art, this interdisciplinary work explores the complex and highly visual techniques of Tacitus' Annales. The volume opens with a discussion of current research in narratology, as applied to Roman historians. Narratology is a helpful and insightful tool, but is often inadequate to deal with specifically visual aspects of ancient narrative. In order to illuminate Tacitus techniques, and to make them speak to modern readers, this book focuses on drawing and illustrating parallels between Tacitus historiographical methods and modern film effects. Building on these premises, Waddell examines a wide array of Tacitus visual narrative devices. Tacitean examples are discussed in light of their narrative effect and purpose in the Annales, as well as the ways in which they are similar to contemporary Roman art and modern film techniques, including focalization, alignment, use of the ambiguous gaze, temporal suggestion and quick-cutting. Through this approach the modern scholar gains a deeper understanding of the many ways in which Tacitus Annales act upon the reader, and how his narrative technique helps to shape, guide, and deeply layer his history.
The book offers good ideas for how to talk about Tacitus rhetoric in the twenty-first century. * The Classical Review *
Philip Waddell is Assistant Professor of Classics at the University of Arizona, USA.