In contrast, the works by Sallust, on the one hand (Chapter 10, Rosenblitt) and by Livy, on the other, focus on ‘the informal and culturally normative aspects of Roman political behaviour’ (Chapter 11, p. 155, Gallia), which highlight the features of Roman political culture and the wider political dynamics that could not be easily constrained within the legal framework of a mixed constitution. By resorting to the use of exempla, which mediate between the particulars of a specific context and universal moral rules (Langlands 2018; Roller 2018), Livy focused on both the individual and the moral, but not on strictly constitutional concerns and their historical changes. In this context, the role of the individual assumes a certain pre-eminence as the historical agent responsible for political change and it is his relationship with the wider socioeconomic and political dynamics that, as Rosenblitt shows (Chapter 10), had indeed preoccupied Sallust throughout his works. In Plutarch’s biographies (Chapter 12, M. Beck), the qualities of the individual are the predominant factor that determines the political success or failure of the commonwealth. These qualities, in Plutarch’s opinion, are informed by an ethical underpinning, acquired through a philosophical training; that philosophical training to which Cicero resorted in order to transcend and reform, in Nicgorski’s view (Chapter 9), his contemporary political culture (on the role of philosophy in Roman political culture, see Introduction to Part V).
By assigning direct speeches to many of their protagonists, some of these authors, such as, for example, Sallust, Livy, Dionysius of Halicarnassus or Appian, bring to light the role of political ideas and, more widely, ideology in the political culture of the Republic (Introduction to Part V and Chapter 28, Morstein-Marx). Informed by Greek rhetoric and philosophy, these speeches were literary compositions that responded to the expectations of the author and of the author’s audience and readership (on the oral dimension of these Greek and Latin works, Wiseman 2015). Together with the speeches delivered in the Senate and in contiones and published by the orators themselves (Chapter 32, Steel), these speeches add an important dimension to the political culture of the Roman Republic (see Introduction to Part V and Chapter 1, Hölkeskamp).
VA
REFERENCES
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