A City of Marble: The Rhetoric of Augustan Rome

Author:   Kathleen S. Lamp
Publisher:   University of South Carolina Press
ISBN:  

9781611172775


Pages:   208
Publication Date:   30 October 2013
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
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A City of Marble: The Rhetoric of Augustan Rome


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Author:   Kathleen S. Lamp
Publisher:   University of South Carolina Press
Imprint:   University of South Carolina Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.30cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.431kg
ISBN:  

9781611172775


ISBN 10:   1611172772
Pages:   208
Publication Date:   30 October 2013
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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Reviews

Innovative, well written, and insightful, A City of Marble: The Rhetoric of Augustan Rome is a must-read recommendation! Rhetoric Review (Richard Leo Enos, Texas Christian University) Lamp s insightful analyses of material culture in the Augustan era read through a rhetorical lens will be much welcomed in our expanding field. But the greater power of City of Marble lies in Lamp s provocative argument for reassessing the rhetorical achievement of the first emperor himself: a potentially controversial approach of interest to any student of communication between rulers and the ruled. Susan C. Jarratt, chair of Comparative Literature and of Women s Studies, University of California, Irvine Through groundbreaking analyses of Augustan rhetoric in such media as monumental art (the Ara Pacis), architectural spaces (the Forum of Augustus), and coins and responses to that rhetoric in popular art and parody Kathleen Lamp s A City of Marble dispels the image of a decline of rhetoric under the principate and makes a strong case for renaissance. Jeffrey Walker, Professor and Chair, Rhetoric and Writing, University of Texas at Austin As Kathleen S. Lamp reveals, Augustus and his contemporaries not only transformed Rome from brick to marble but rhetoric as well. Challenging conventional views of rhetoric s decline as Rome moved from Republic to Empire, A City of Marble: The Rhetoric of Augustan Rome provocatively argues that the cultural and building programs of the Principate are best understood as conscious manifestations of visual and material rhetoric. Innovative, well written, and insightful, A City of Marble is a must read recommendation! Richard Leo Enos, Piper Professor, Lillian Radford Chair of Rhetoric and Composition, Texas Christian University . . . Lamp does a superlative job of classical outreach. She brings antiquity in a very accessible package to non-specialists . . . well illustrated and clearly written --The Journal of Roman Studies


Through groundbreaking analyses of Augustan rhetoric in such media as monumental art (the Ara Pacis), architectural spaces (the Forum of Augustus), and coins -- and 'responses' to that rhetoric in popular art and parody -- Kathleen Lamp's A City of Marble dispels the image of a decline of rhetoric under the principate and makes a strong case for 'renaissance.' --Jeffrey Walker, Professor and Chair, Rhetoric and Writing, University of Texas at Austin


Innovative, well written, and insightful, A City of Marble: The Rhetoric of Augustan Rome is a must-read recommendation! --Richard Leo Enos, Texas Christian University Rhetoric Review


Lamp's insightful analyses of material culture in the Augustan era read through a rhetorical lens will be much welcomed in our expanding field. But the greater power of City of Marble lies in Lamp's provocative argument for reassessing the rhetorical achievement of the first emperor himself: a potentially controversial approach of interest to any student of communication between rulers and the ruled. --Susan C. Jarratt, chair of Comparative Literature and of Women's Studies, University of California, Irvine Through groundbreaking analyses of Augustan rhetoric in such media as monumental art (the Ara Pacis), architectural spaces (the Forum of Augustus), and coins -- and 'responses' to that rhetoric in popular art and parody -- Kathleen Lamp's A City of Marble dispels the image of a decline of rhetoric under the principate and makes a strong case for 'renaissance.' --Jeffrey Walker, Professor and Chair, Rhetoric and Writing, University of Texas at Austin As Kathleen S. Lamp reveals, Augustus and his contemporaries not only transformed Rome from 'brick to marble' but rhetoric as well. Challenging conventional views of rhetoric's decline as Rome moved from Republic to Empire, A City of Marble: The Rhetoric of Augustan Rome provocatively argues that the cultural and building programs of the Principate are best understood as conscious manifestations of visual and material rhetoric. Innovative, well written, and insightful, A City of Marble is a 'must read' recommendation! --Richard Leo Enos, Piper Professor, Lillian Radford Chair of Rhetoric and Composition, Texas Christian University Innovative, well written, and insightful, A City of Marble: The Rhetoric of Augustan Rome is a must-read recommendation! --Rhetoric Review (Richard Leo Enos, Texas Christian University) Innovative, well written, and insightful, A City of Marble: The Rhetoric of Augustan Rome is a must-read recommendation! Rhetoric Review (Richard Leo Enos, Texas Christian University) Lamp s insightful analyses of material culture in the Augustan era read through a rhetorical lens will be much welcomed in our expanding field. But the greater power of City of Marble lies in Lamp s provocative argument for reassessing the rhetorical achievement of the first emperor himself: a potentially controversial approach of interest to any student of communication between rulers and the ruled. Susan C. Jarratt, chair of Comparative Literature and of Women s Studies, University of California, Irvine As Kathleen S. Lamp reveals, Augustus and his contemporaries not only transformed Rome from brick to marble but rhetoric as well. Challenging conventional views of rhetoric s decline as Rome moved from Republic to Empire, A City of Marble: The Rhetoric of Augustan Rome provocatively argues that the cultural and building programs of the Principate are best understood as conscious manifestations of visual and material rhetoric. Innovative, well written, and insightful, A City of Marble is a must read recommendation! Richard Leo Enos, Piper Professor, Lillian Radford Chair of Rhetoric and Composition, Texas Christian University Through groundbreaking analyses of Augustan rhetoric in such media as monumental art (the Ara Pacis), architectural spaces (the Forum of Augustus), and coins and responses to that rhetoric in popular art and parody Kathleen Lamp s A City of Marble dispels the image of a decline of rhetoric under the principate and makes a strong case for renaissance. Jeffrey Walker, Professor and Chair, Rhetoric and Writing, University of Texas at Austin . . . Lamp does a superlative job of classical outreach. She brings antiquity in a very accessible package to non-specialists . . . well illustrated and clearly written --The Journal of Roman Studies


Author Information

Kathleen S. Lamp is an assistant professor of English at Arizona State University, USA Her research has appeared in Rhetoric Society Quarterly and Philosophy and Rhetoric.

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