Identity Crises in Apuleius

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A01=Ashli J. E. Baker
ancient Mediterranean
ancient Rome
Apologia
Apology
Apuleis
Author_Ashli J. E. Baker
authority
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Category=JP
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empire
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eq_history
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Florida
forthcoming
identity
identity in ancient Rome
identity in the ancient world
identity in the Roman Empire
Imperial Rome
Isis-Fortuna
Lucian
Metamorphosis
multiethnicity
multilinguistic
Onus
Pro Se De Magia
Roman Empire
Roman magic
Roman witchcraft
Rome
Second Sophistic
shape-shifting
social power
social status
socio-cultural identity
socio-political identity
sociological identity
transformation
witchcraft in ancient Rome

Product details

  • ISBN 9780299357702
  • Weight: 454g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 18 Aug 2026
  • Publisher: University of Wisconsin Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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In the second century CE, the multiethnic, multilingual, and religiously diverse Roman Empire grew to its greatest extent. To maintain order, Rome relied heavily on strict social hierarchies, established not only through legal frameworks like citizenship, but also through cultural markers (such as clothing and language) and personal traits (such as educational achievement). Even as Rome grew into one of the world's most powerful empires, however, its social systems strained under the stresses caused by that very growth, which encouraged cultural interaction, long-distance travel, and social mobility—all of which threatened the hierarchies that underpinned Roman order.

It was during this time that the North African–born, Latin-speaking, Greek-educated Apuleius—whose own background showcases the multiplicity of identities available then to Roman individuals—flourished. He remains one of the ancient world's best-known authors today, thanks particularly to his famous novel, Metamorphoses, known also as The Golden Ass. Taking a bird's-eye view of his work, Ashli J. E. Baker proffers a bold new reading of Apuleius, proposing that across his writings there is a consistent focus on the theme of identity and its instability. By placing close readings in conversation with sociocultural and material contexts, she shows that because the structures of Roman power depended on inherently unreliable markers of identity, Apuleius' work can be read as a biting critique of the fraught relationship between the individual, society, and the state in his contemporary Rome.

Ashli J. E. Baker is a professor of Classics & Ancient Mediterranean Studies at Bucknell University.

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