Dead Letters, Documentality, and the Noctes Atticae of Aulus Gellius
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Scott J. DiGiulio
Abstract
Amidst the explosive proliferation of written texts in the latter half of the second century CE, Aulus Gellius’ miscellany, the Noctes Atticae (NA), offers a critical lens for understanding how at least one ancient reader approached reading different material in the Roman Empire. This chapter examines Gellius’ use of texts that would be conventionally termed “documentary” and argues that he sees them as more analogous to the literary works quoted throughout the NA than we might initially assume. While his narratives discussing the treatment of official documents suggest that some material had privileged status, his citations from the letters of Cicero and Augustus, as well as his discussions of public inscriptions, reveal that the divide between the documentary and the literary was more permeable than we might otherwise imagine. In his hands, literary works and documents stand together as authoritative evidence for Latin language and style within the broader text-world of his miscellany.
Abstract
Amidst the explosive proliferation of written texts in the latter half of the second century CE, Aulus Gellius’ miscellany, the Noctes Atticae (NA), offers a critical lens for understanding how at least one ancient reader approached reading different material in the Roman Empire. This chapter examines Gellius’ use of texts that would be conventionally termed “documentary” and argues that he sees them as more analogous to the literary works quoted throughout the NA than we might initially assume. While his narratives discussing the treatment of official documents suggest that some material had privileged status, his citations from the letters of Cicero and Augustus, as well as his discussions of public inscriptions, reveal that the divide between the documentary and the literary was more permeable than we might otherwise imagine. In his hands, literary works and documents stand together as authoritative evidence for Latin language and style within the broader text-world of his miscellany.
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter I
- Acknowledgements V
- Contents VII
- Abbreviations IX
- List of Figures XI
- Introduction 1
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Part I: Approaches to Ancient Documentality
- Documenting Identity in the Early Roman Empire 35
- Copying the Canon: Imperial School Texts as Documentary Traces 57
- Documenting Wonderland: Lucian’s True Stories and the Documentary imaginaire 79
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Part II: Documentary Communities and Landscapes
- Cities Full of Words: Illiteracy and Epigraphy in Lucian of Samosata 107
- Documenting the oikoumenê: What “Documents” Supported the Description of the Inhabited World in the Hellenistic and Early Imperial Periods? 133
- A Community Set in Stone? Monumental Decrees as Instruments of Greek Interactions 153
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Part III: Between Documents and Literature
- Dead Letters, Documentality, and the Noctes Atticae of Aulus Gellius 181
- The Relationship between Documents and Literature in Late Antiquity: The Case of the Petition, between Document, Adaptation and Literary Creation 209
- When the Letter Speaks Up: Living and Lifeless Letters 233
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Epilogue
- The Ancient Historian and His Documents: Reader, Interpreter, and/or Author? 253
- List of Contributors 279
- Index Locorum 281
- Index Rerum 285
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter I
- Acknowledgements V
- Contents VII
- Abbreviations IX
- List of Figures XI
- Introduction 1
-
Part I: Approaches to Ancient Documentality
- Documenting Identity in the Early Roman Empire 35
- Copying the Canon: Imperial School Texts as Documentary Traces 57
- Documenting Wonderland: Lucian’s True Stories and the Documentary imaginaire 79
-
Part II: Documentary Communities and Landscapes
- Cities Full of Words: Illiteracy and Epigraphy in Lucian of Samosata 107
- Documenting the oikoumenê: What “Documents” Supported the Description of the Inhabited World in the Hellenistic and Early Imperial Periods? 133
- A Community Set in Stone? Monumental Decrees as Instruments of Greek Interactions 153
-
Part III: Between Documents and Literature
- Dead Letters, Documentality, and the Noctes Atticae of Aulus Gellius 181
- The Relationship between Documents and Literature in Late Antiquity: The Case of the Petition, between Document, Adaptation and Literary Creation 209
- When the Letter Speaks Up: Living and Lifeless Letters 233
-
Epilogue
- The Ancient Historian and His Documents: Reader, Interpreter, and/or Author? 253
- List of Contributors 279
- Index Locorum 281
- Index Rerum 285