List of Contributors
Editions and Abbreviations
Tristan Power: Introduction: The Originality of Suetonius
Part I: Formal Features
1: Donna W. Hurley: Suetonius' Rubric Sandwich
2: Cynthia Damon: Suetonius the Ventriloquist
3: Tristan Power: The Endings of Suetonius' Caesars
Part II: Reading the Lives
4: John Henderson: Was Suetonius' Julius a Caesar?
5: Rebecca Langlands: Exemplary Influences and Augustus' Pernicious
Moral Legacy
6: Erik Gunderson: E.g. Augustus: exemplum in the Augustus and
Tiberius
7: Donna W. Hurley: Rhetorics of Assassination: Ironic Reversal and
the Emperor Gaius
8: W. Jeffrey Tatum: Another Look at Suetonius' Titus
9: Jean-Michel Hulls: The Mirror in the Text: Privacy, Performance,
and the Power of Suetonius' Domitian
Part III: Biographical Thresholds
10: Roy K. Gibson: Suetonius and the uiri illustres of Pliny the
Younger
11: Tristan Power: Suetonius' Famous Courtesans
12: T. P. Wiseman: Suetonius and the Origin of Pantomime
13: Jamie Wood: Suetonius and the De uita Caesarum in the
Carolingian Empire
Bibliography
Index Locorum
General Index
Tristan Power is Lecturer in Classics at Columbia University. His
publications include a chapter on Suetonius in K. De Temmerman and
K. Demoen (eds.), Writing Biography in Greece and Rome: Narrative
Technique and Fictionalization (2016). Roy K. Gibson is Professor
of Latin at the University of Manchester. His publications include
Ovid: Ars Amatoria Book 3 (2003) and (with R. Morello) Reading the
Letters of Pliny the Younger: An
Introduction (2012).
Tristan Power and Roy Gibson, the editors of this new collection of
thirteen lively essays, Suetonius the Biographer, seek to put the
author in the spotlight by directing the critical focus squarely
back to his craft as a biographer. By meeting Suetonius on his own
terms, the contributors aim to clarify how and why he is an
innovative writer still worth reading today ... as this stimulating
collection of essays demonstrates, looking below the surface of
Suetonius's text into the inner workings of the author's mind is
richly rewarding.
*Rhiannon Ash, Times Literary Supplement*
excellent collection of essays ... There are no weak links in the
essays, and the choice of material is a thought-provoking pointer
to how those Suetonian times have changed ... The volume as a whole
is certainly an important further step in dismantling that
caricature, and all readers and browsers will learn a lot.
*Christopher Pelling, Classical Review*
[T]he most thorough and successful attempt to date to recover
Suetonius as an innovative biographer ... This is an unusually
excellent edited volume. While diverse and occasionally divergent,
the papers overall make a strong case for the artful biographer.
Their thoughtful arrangement, along with Power's introduction,
enhances their impact. Established fans of Suetonius will cheer,
and new ones should join them.
*Josiah Osgood, Sehepunkte*
this engaging volume succeeds in advancing our understanding of
Suetonius ... The thirteen essays are well-edited and coherently
organized, concluding with a rich bibliography and generous
indexes. Scholars and students interested in biography and early
imperial history will want to take note of this stimulating
publication.
*Salvador Bartera, Classical World*
Power and Gibson and their contributors have given us what is often
a demanding read, but certainly something that for students of
Suetonius demands to be read.
*David Wardle, Histos*
a welcome addition to English-language scholarship on Suetonius,
his literary style, his contributions to the genre of biography and
his subsequent reception ... the editors have done a good job of
establishing connections between the chapters and teasing out key
themes that should inform and enrich our assessment of Suetonius in
future scholarship ... attentive readers will return to Suetonius
more thoughtfully and cautiously in future sittings.
*Mark Bradley, Journal of Roman Studies*
By offering scholarship on the DVC that employs a wide variety of
approaches and includes successful forays beyond the DVC's borders,
Suetonius the Biographer expands our awareness of the myriad of
possibilites for future work on this under-estimated author. That
there can be great care, artistry, and purpose to be explored in
works that, to the casual reader, may seem at times to be
compilations of mere data (however quirky) is something we are just
beginning to appreciate in such authors as Pliny the Elder and
Suetonius. Suetonius the Biographer piques one's appetite for the
next modest spate of Suetonian monograph(s).
*Trevor S. Luke, Classical Journal Online*
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