ricardienne: (Default)
sigaloenta ([personal profile] ricardienne) wrote2012-10-25 10:05 pm

(no subject)

Last night's Colbert Report was super classical! (I watch on the internet, a day or so behind and especially when I'm grading) Oh, and it also had Anthony Everett, noted popularizing historian of Ancient Rome on it.

The contrast was interesting! Colbert's opening segment was an incredibly tasteless routine about Donald Trump. Seriously problematic jokes about coerced pathic homosexuality --- oh, hey Catullus/Martial/Juvenal/... But really. There's an interesting point of continuity with the ancient world, there: male identity, power, authority, who gets to speak, sexual domination. But elderly (white, male) professorial types waxing fondly in British accents about the Empire, mostly in terms of its military and its exciting imperial personalities? Not so much.

I'm not bothered by the gross generalizations, the really bizarre statements about Romanization (straight out of the 19th century), the reduction of Rome to a homogenous machine enlivened with a few salacious anecdotes. (I'm a pedant and I have a field of expertise: of course I think he said everything wrong!) I'm just a little annoyed that this is what history, and especially Roman history apparently means. When there are so many more interesting things being done, and so many more interesting people doing them (plenty of whom are popularizing personalities, I might add), why is it still comforting traditional authorities and Great Man history?

[identity profile] ricardienne.livejournal.com 2012-10-27 09:08 pm (UTC)(link)
That sounds like such a cool topic! I am shockingly ignorant about archaeology, so I have no idea how gage the health of a population from archaeological data -- how are you going about it?

I admit that, as a literature person, I mostly work with the elite and their texts (Some days, I have smart ways of justifying it; other days, I don't), but one can either use Suetonius uncritically as a source for "history" or one can use him to, say, think about different genres of historiography and about the reporter's access to authority. And one of those s