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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Melissa Matthes (Univ. of Maryland)Publisher: Pennsylvania State University Press Imprint: Pennsylvania State University Press Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.340kg ISBN: 9780271030128ISBN 10: 0271030127 Pages: 200 Publication Date: 15 January 2001 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsReviewsThis book makes an important contribution to republican theorizing and will be of interest to political theorists in general, and to those working in the republican and feminist traditions in particular. [It is well written, integrates fresh texts with more familiar material, and provides a new prism through which to examine issues such as the origins of civic attachment and the meaning of citizenship.] --Bruce Smith, Allegheny College These books on the civic republican tradition are lively, learned, and filled with complex, subtle arguments that draw upon scholarship from the apparently bottomless well of political theory in order to nourish the ever expanding field of 'gender.' --Michael Mosher, Political Theory What is the relationship between storytelling and politics? To answer this question is to grapple with the political significance of narrative, as both a practice and product of symbolization. Melissa Matthes's study of how the story of the rape of Lucretia figures in the republican tradition offers a powerful response to this question, and in the process helpfully elucidates narrative's political efforts.By showing how narratives of femininity and masculinity simultaneously thread through and give form to republics, the book makes a compelling case for storytelling as itself a form of politics. --Elizabeth Wingrove, Journal of Politics The strength of the work lies in Matthews' in-depth textual analysis, which illustrates the historical role myth plays in politics. --Sylvia Burrow, APA Newsletter This book investigates the various and often surprising use by political thinkers of the story about the rape of Lucretia and its role in the founding of the Roman republic. This turns out to be a rich theme in the history of republican political thought, one that Matthes explores with enthusiasm and insight. The book should be of interest not only to students of the history of political thought but also to students of the representation of women in political and dramatic literature. --Bernard Yack, University of Wisconsin These books on the civic republican tradition are lively, learned, and filled with complex, subtle arguments that draw upon scholarship from the apparently bottomless well of political theory in order to nourish the ever expanding field of 'gender.' --Michael Mosher, Political Theory This book makes an important contribution to republican theorizing and will be of interest to political theorists in general, and to those working in the republican and feminist traditions in particular. [It is well written, integrates fresh texts with more familiar material, and provides a new prism through which to examine issues such as the origins of civic attachment and the meaning of citizenship.] --Bruce Smith, Allegheny College What is the relationship between storytelling and politics? To answer this question is to grapple with the political significance of narrative, as both a practice and product of symbolization. Melissa Matthes s study of how the story of the rape of Lucretia figures in the republican tradition offers a powerful response to this question, and in the process helpfully elucidates narrative s political efforts.By showing how narratives of femininity and masculinity simultaneously thread through and give form to republics, the book makes a compelling case for storytelling as itself a form of politics. Elizabeth Wingrove, Journal of Politics The strength of the work lies in Matthews in-depth textual analysis, which illustrates the historical role myth plays in politics. Sylvia Burrow, APA Newsletter This book investigates the various and often surprising use by political thinkers of the story about the rape of Lucretia and its role in the founding of the Roman republic. This turns out to be a rich theme in the history of republican political thought, one that Matthes explores with enthusiasm and insight. The book should be of interest not only to students of the history of political thought but also to students of the representation of women in political and dramatic literature. Bernard Yack, University of Wisconsin These books on the civic republican tradition are lively, learned, and filled with complex, subtle arguments that draw upon scholarship from the apparently bottomless well of political theory in order to nourish the ever expanding field of gender.' Michael Mosher, Political Theory This book makes an important contribution to republican theorizing and will be of interest to political theorists in general, and to those working in the republican and feminist traditions in particular. [It is well written, integrates fresh texts with more familiar material, and provides a new prism through which to examine issues such as the origins of civic attachment and the meaning of citizenship.] Bruce Smith, Allegheny College These books on the civic republican tradition are lively, learned, and filled with complex, subtle arguments that draw upon scholarship from the apparently bottomless well of political theory in order to nourish the ever expanding field of 'gender.' --Michael Mosher, Political Theory The strength of the work lies in Matthews' in-depth textual analysis, which illustrates the historical role myth plays in politics. --Sylvia Burrow, APA Newsletter What is the relationship between storytelling and politics? To answer this question is to grapple with the political significance of narrative, as both a practice and product of symbolization. Melissa Matthes's study of how the story of the rape of Lucretia figures in the republican tradition offers a powerful response to this question, and in the process helpfully elucidates narrative's political efforts.By showing how narratives of femininity and masculinity simultaneously thread through and give form to republics, the book makes a compelling case for storytelling as itself a form of politics. --Elizabeth Wingrove, Journal of Politics This book makes an important contribution to republican theorizing and will be of interest to political theorists in general, and to those working in the republican and feminist traditions in particular. [It is well written, integrates fresh texts with more familiar material, and provides a new prism through which to examine issues such as the origins of civic attachment and the meaning of citizenship.] --Bruce Smith, Allegheny College This book investigates the various and often surprising use by political thinkers of the story about the rape of Lucretia and its role in the founding of the Roman republic. This turns out to be a rich theme in the history of republican political thought, one that Matthes explores with enthusiasm and insight. The book should be of interest not only to students of the history of political thought but also to students of the representation of women in political and dramatic literature. --Bernard Yack, University of Wisconsin These books on the civic republican tradition are lively, learned, and filled with complex, subtle arguments that draw upon scholarship from the apparently bottomless well of political theory in order to nourish the ever expanding field of gender.' Michael Mosher, Political Theory The strength of the work lies in Matthews in-depth textual analysis, which illustrates the historical role myth plays in politics. Sylvia Burrow, APA Newsletter What is the relationship between storytelling and politics? To answer this question is to grapple with the political significance of narrative, as both a practice and product of symbolization. Melissa Matthes s study of how the story of the rape of Lucretia figures in the republican tradition offers a powerful response to this question, and in the process helpfully elucidates narrative s political efforts.By showing how narratives of femininity and masculinity simultaneously thread through and give form to republics, the book makes a compelling case for storytelling as itself a form of politics. Elizabeth Wingrove, Journal of Politics This book makes an important contribution to republican theorizing and will be of interest to political theorists in general, and to those working in the republican and feminist traditions in particular. [It is well written, integrates fresh texts with more familiar material, and provides a new prism through which to examine issues such as the origins of civic attachment and the meaning of citizenship.] Bruce Smith, Allegheny College This book investigates the various and often surprising use by political thinkers of the story about the rape of Lucretia and its role in the founding of the Roman republic. This turns out to be a rich theme in the history of republican political thought, one that Matthes explores with enthusiasm and insight. The book should be of interest not only to students of the history of political thought but also to students of the representation of women in political and dramatic literature. Bernard Yack, University of Wisconsin These books on the civic republican tradition are lively, learned, and filled with complex, subtle arguments that draw upon scholarship from the apparently bottomless well of political theory in order to nourish the ever expanding field of gender.' Michael Mosher, Political Theory The strength of the work lies in Matthews in-depth textual analysis, which illustrates the historical role myth plays in politics. Sylvia Burrow, APA Newsletter What is the relationship between storytelling and politics? To answer this question is to grapple with the political significance of narrative, as both a practice and product of symbolization. Melissa Matthes s study of how the story of the rape of Lucretia figures in the republican tradition offers a powerful response to this question, and in the process helpfully elucidates narrative s political efforts.By showing how narratives of femininity and masculinity simultaneously thread through and give form to republics, the book makes a compelling case for storytelling as itself a form of politics. Elizabeth Wingrove, Journal of Politics This book makes an important contribution to republican theorizing and will be of interest to political theorists in general, and to those working in the republican and feminist traditions in particular. [It is well written, integrates fresh texts with more familiar material, and provides a new prism through which to examine issues such as the origins of civic attachment and the meaning of citizenship.] Bruce Smith, Allegheny College This book investigates the various and often surprising use by political thinkers of the story about the rape of Lucretia and its role in the founding of the Roman republic. This turns out to be a rich theme in the history of republican political thought, one that Matthes explores with enthusiasm and insight. The book should be of interest not only to students of the history of political thought but also to students of the representation of women in political and dramatic literature. Bernard Yack, University of Wisconsin These books on the civic republican tradition are lively, learned, and filled with complex, subtle arguments that draw upon scholarship from the apparently bottomless well of political theory in order to nourish the ever expanding field of 'gender.' --Michael Mosher, Political Theory The strength of the work lies in Matthews' in-depth textual analysis, which illustrates the historical role myth plays in politics. --Sylvia Burrow, APA Newsletter What is the relationship between storytelling and politics? To answer this question is to grapple with the political significance of narrative, as both a practice and product of symbolization. Melissa Matthes's study of how the story of the rape of Lucretia figures in the republican tradition offers a powerful response to this question, and in the process helpfully elucidates narrative's political efforts.By showing how narratives of femininity and masculinity simultaneously thread through and give form to republics, the book makes a compelling case for storytelling as itself a form of politics. --Elizabeth Wingrove, Journal of Politics This book makes an important contribution to republican theorizing and will be of interest to political theorists in general, and to those working in the republican and feminist traditions in particular. [It is well written, integrates fresh texts with more familiar material, and provides a new prism through which to examine issues such as the origins of civic attachment and the meaning of citizenship.] --Bruce Smith, Allegheny College This book investigates the various and often surprising use by political thinkers of the story about the rape of Lucretia and its role in the founding of the Roman republic. This turns out to be a rich theme in the history of republican political thought, one that Matthes explores with enthusiasm and insight. The book should be of interest not only to students of the history of political thought but also to students of the representation of women in political and dramatic literature. --Bernard Yack, University of Wisconsin Author InformationMelissa M. Matthes is Assistant Professor of Government & Politics and Women's Studies at the University of Maryland. Her articles have appeared in Alif and Political Theory, and she has contributed a chapter to The Nature of Woman and the Art of Politics (Eduardo Velasquez, ed., 1999). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |