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Children in the Visual Arts of Imperial Rome Jeannine Diddle Uzzi (Whitman College, Washington)

Children in the Visual Arts of Imperial Rome By Jeannine Diddle Uzzi (Whitman College, Washington)

Children in the Visual Arts of Imperial Rome by Jeannine Diddle Uzzi (Whitman College, Washington)


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Summary

In this 2005 study, Jeannine Uzzi examines the ruling elite's notions of what it meant to be Roman by examining images of children in Roman imperial art. Roman children are most often shown in depictions of peaceful public gatherings before the emperor, whereas non-Roman children appear only in scenes of submission, triumph, or violent military activity.

Children in the Visual Arts of Imperial Rome Summary

Children in the Visual Arts of Imperial Rome by Jeannine Diddle Uzzi (Whitman College, Washington)

Modern approaches to Roman imperialism have often characterized Romanzation as a benign or neutral process of cultural exchange between Roman and non-Roman, conqueror and conquered. Although supported by certain types of literary and archaeological evidence, this characterization is not reflected in the visual imagery of the Roman ruling elite. In official imperial art, Roman children are most often shown in depictions of peaceful public gatherings before the emperor, whereas non-Roman children appear only in scenes of submission, triumph, or violent military activity. Images of children, those images most fraught with potential in Roman art, underscore the contrast between Roman and non-Roman and as a group present a narrative of Roman identity. As Jeannine Diddle Uzzi argues in this 2005 study, the stark contrast between images of Roman and non-Roman children conveys the ruling elite's notions of what it meant to be Roman.

About Jeannine Diddle Uzzi (Whitman College, Washington)

Jeannine Uzzi is assistant professor of classics at the University of Southern Maine.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction: the question; 2. Evidence, methodology, and the child image; 3. Imperial largesse; 4. Public gathering; 5. Anaglypha Traiani/Hadriani; 6. Submission; 7. Triumph; 8. Battle ground; 9. Ara Pacis; 10. Conclusion: a narrative of identity; Appendix. Children in nonofficial imagery.

Additional information

NPB9780521820264
9780521820264
052182026X
Children in the Visual Arts of Imperial Rome by Jeannine Diddle Uzzi (Whitman College, Washington)
New
Hardback
Cambridge University Press
2005-06-08
266
N/A
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