Book contents
- Articulating Resistance under the Roman Empire
- Articulating Resistance under the Roman Empire
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Introduction Articulating Resistance
- Part I Language and Identity
- Part II Genres of Literary Resistance
- Part III Identity Negotiation
- Part IV Religion and Resistance
- Chapter 8 Anti-Roman Sibyl(s)
- Chapter 9 Traditions of Resistance in Greco-Egyptian Narratives
- Chapter 10 Julian the Emperor and the Reaction against Christianity
- Epilogue Resisting Resistance
- References
- Index
Epilogue - Resisting Resistance
from Part IV - Religion and Resistance
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 December 2022
- Articulating Resistance under the Roman Empire
- Articulating Resistance under the Roman Empire
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Introduction Articulating Resistance
- Part I Language and Identity
- Part II Genres of Literary Resistance
- Part III Identity Negotiation
- Part IV Religion and Resistance
- Chapter 8 Anti-Roman Sibyl(s)
- Chapter 9 Traditions of Resistance in Greco-Egyptian Narratives
- Chapter 10 Julian the Emperor and the Reaction against Christianity
- Epilogue Resisting Resistance
- References
- Index
Summary
In this epilogue, we consider first the language of resistance and how its rhetoric encodes a complex and competing set of positionalities: it is hard, we argue, to distinguish between cultural resistance and cultural difference. This process is especially complex in the Roman Empire, where cultural conflict between Roman and Greek, for example, has to negotiate the surprising dynamics of cultural authority where the colonisers privilege the culture of the conquered, and where Christianity is a major vector in the changing nature of resistance over time. This opening discussion leads to six ways in which the case of the Roman Empire offers a particularly productive and challenging model for contemporary resistance studies, which shows a way forward from this volume: first, resistance from marginalised groups and the possibility of institutional rejection of dominant culture; second, resistance from within the elite; third, resistance as a multidirectional process which is testimony to the fragility of imperial self-assertion; fourth, the resistance between classes, and especially slaves to masters; fifth, how the imaginary of resistance – its narratives and tropes – functions; sixth, how resistance has its own historical account which shifts from public acts of resistance to models of inwardness.
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- Articulating Resistance under the Roman Empire , pp. 239 - 256Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023
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