Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part I: Soul-Shaping Speech
1. Senecan Philosophy and the Psychology of Command
2. Self-Address in Senecan Tragedy
3. Self-Address in the Satyricon
Part II: Soul-Revealing Speech
4. Political Speech in Declementia
5. Soul, Speech, and Politics in the Apocolocyntosisand the Satyricon
6. Writing, Body, and Money
Epilogue
Notes
Bibliography
Index
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Description
""Star has performed a valuable service in presenting a fresh approach to familiar authors which helps the discussion to move beyond some of the established academic truisms of the last few decades, and identifying the common conceptual ground that they share. He offers us a fresh perspective on both Seneca's and Petronius' views of self-fashioning, making a major contribution to several recent areas of interest within classics. Both graduate students and scholars working on Neronian literature or Roman concepts of identity will benefit from reading Star's argument.""