Roman letters demonstrate that language has imperium: the power to resolve problems, to negotiate relationships and to construct identities. This book combines sociolinguistic and historical approaches to explore how that power is deployed by the bilingual elite of the Roman Republic and Empire, offering the first systematic analysis of Greek code-switches in the letters of Cicero, Pliny, Marcus Aurelius and Fronto and in the Lives of Suetonius. Greek was a subtle tool within Latin epistolary communication, and an analysis of letter writers' bilingual practices reveals their manipulation of language to manage relationships between peers and across hierarchical or political divides, uncovering the workings of politics and society. Comparative analysis of Roman and modern code-switching contributes to the debate on how bilingual strategies in letters evolve and how they relate to oral and literary language. The language of letters illuminates the Roman world and its entanglements with Greek language and culture.
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Product Details
Weight: 590g
Dimensions: 146 x 223mm
Publication Date: 03 Oct 2019
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781108480161
About Alex MullenOlivia Elder
Olivia Elder holds a CRASSH/British School at Rome Research Fellowship at the University of Cambridge having recently completed her doctorate 'Language and the Politics of Roman Identity' at Peterhouse Cambridge. She is an ancient historian with particular interests in bilingualism epigraphy Roman identity and epistolography. Alex Mullen is Associate Professor of Classics at the University of Nottingham and a Fellow of All Souls College Oxford. She is co-editor (with Patrick James) of Multilingualism in the Graeco-Roman Worlds (Cambridge 2012) and author of Southern Gaul and the Mediterranean (Cambridge 2013) which won the American Historical Association's James Henry Breasted Prize. She is Principal Investigator of the ERC project The Latinization of the North-Western Roman Provinces: Sociolinguistics Epigraphy and Archaeology (20172022).