Living with Risk in the Late Roman World


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By Cam Grey
Imprint:
UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA PRESS
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Format:
HARDBACK
Dimensions:
229 x 152 mm
Weight:

Pages:
376

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Description

Cam Grey is Professor of Classical Studies at the University of Pennsylvania and author of Constructing Communities in the Late Roman Countryside.

"In Living with Risk in the Late Roman World, Cam Grey offers a new vision of the precarity of ancient life. Where we were accustomed to think of catastrophes such as volcanic eruptions or droughts as interruptions of the status quo, Grey shows how ancient populations lived with a constant awareness of danger and uncertainty. Their habits of thought and their ways of life reflected this awareness. Grey's case studies combine ancient testimony and archaeological data with insights drawn from a range of social and natural science disciplines to produce a compelling new understanding of the conditions of life around the late Roman world." (Greg Woolf, author of The Life and Death of Ancient Cities: A Natural History) "Employing the concept of 'riskscape' as the analytical framework by which to interpret the late Roman world, Cam Grey marvelously evokes people's perceptions of hazards as well as their physical vulnerability to them, and the interplay and relationship between the physical and metaphysical worlds. In doing so, Grey integrates disaster studies with late Roman world history very well, showing not only a mastery of the historiography and sources of late Roman antiquity, but also demonstrating a thorough conversance with the literature and theories current in critical disaster studies." (Gregory Bankoff, co-editor of Why Vulnerability Still Matters: The Politics of Disaster Risk Creation)

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