Martial: The World of the Epigram
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Review\n"Despite the wealth of intriguingly enigmatic material to ponder in Martial's corpus, until quite recently it has been the subject of only a modest amount of critical work. This volume is a welcome addition to the literature. Fitzgerald and the University of Chicago Press are to be congratulated for this title, which is now the standard English-language general introduction to Rome's imperial epigrammatist par excellence. Beautifully produced and edited, and including a valuable guide (in the works cited) to scholarship in the field . . . the book is a joy to read. . . . Essential." ― Choice\n"Far from being a poet of mere 'inscriptions' or epigrams, Fitzgerald persuasively points to the ways in which present-day readers can discover a world in [Martial's] verse."
-- Sean Nalty ― Virginia Quarterly Review\n"[Fitzgerald] gives us what Martial may have meant, or intended in the Rome in which he lived. This book is well worth the time to read to a wide range of readers." -- Bruce Swann ― Bryn Mawr Classical Review\n"[Fitzgerald's] monograph is unique for the way in which it balances close readings of individual poems with larger analyses of Martial's semiotics of structure and for its ability to see the interweaving of the poems and their 'world' as a dynamic two-way process that brings together historical, socio-political, and cultural questions. . . . The social and historical reality of the city is convincingly presented as an analogue to the poetry." -- Ilaria Marchesi ― Bryn Mawr Classical Review\n“A polished piece of confident literary criticism in the best and broadest sense of the term, this book will significantly impact the way people read Martial. Fitzgerald regularly takes the best ideas of his predecessors and pushes them still further, at the same time providing a much-needed synthesis of Martial scholarship. The writing is lucid and smart, and hardly a page goes by without a notable observation or insight.” -- Erik Gunderson, author of Declamation, Paternity, and Roman Identity: Authority\n“Fitzgerald’s immensely pleasurable book makes sense of Martial’s body of work in a way that no previous scholarship has done. Fitzgerald has found and explored aspects of the epigram that enable a rich and complex reading of these apparently off-the-cuff little poems. Not only are his readings highly suggestive, but he often manages to tie these insightful literary interpretations to the social, economic, and political phenomena of the day. In analyzing the poems he has selected, Fitzgerald ultimately provides us with a model of how to read other epigrams on our own.”
-- Shadi Bartsch, author of The Mirror of the Self: Sexuality, Self-Knowledge, and\nIn this age of the sound bite, what sort of author could be more relevant than a master of the epigram? Martial, the most influential epigrammatist of classical antiquity, was just such a virtuoso of the form, but despite his pertinence to today’s culture, his work has been largely neglected in contemporary scholarship. Arguing that Martial is a major author who deserves more sustained attention, William Fitzgerald provides an insightful tour of his works, shedding new and much-needed light on the Roman poet’s world—and how it might speak to our own.\nWriting in the late first century CE—when the epigram was firmly embedded in the social life of the Roman elite—Martial published his poems in a series of books that were widely read and enjoyed. Exploring what it means to read such a collection of epigrams, Fitzgerald examines the paradoxical relationship between the self-enclosed epigram and the book of poems that is more than the sum of its parts. And he goes on to show how Martial, by imagining these books being displayed in shops and shipped across the empire to admiring readers, prophetically behaved like a modern author. Chock-full of epigrams itself—in both Latin and English versions—Fitzgerald’s study will delight classicists, literary scholars, a
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