Book contents
- Epicurus in Rome
- Epicurus in Rome
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Chapter 1 Introduction
- Part I Epicurus and Roman Identities
- Chapter 2 Sint Ista Graecorum: How to be an Epicurean in Late Republican Rome – Evidence from Cicero’s On Ends 1–2
- Chapter 3 Cicero’s Rhetoric of Anti-Epicureanism: Anonymity as Critique
- Chapter 4 Was Atticus an Epicurean?
- Chapter 5 Caesar the Epicurean? A Matter of Life and Death
- Chapter 6 Otium and Voluptas: Catullus and Roman Epicureanism
- Part II Epicurus and Lucretian Postures
- Bibliography
- General Index
Chapter 6 - Otium and Voluptas: Catullus and Roman Epicureanism
from Part I - Epicurus and Roman Identities
- Epicurus in Rome
- Epicurus in Rome
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Chapter 1 Introduction
- Part I Epicurus and Roman Identities
- Chapter 2 Sint Ista Graecorum: How to be an Epicurean in Late Republican Rome – Evidence from Cicero’s On Ends 1–2
- Chapter 3 Cicero’s Rhetoric of Anti-Epicureanism: Anonymity as Critique
- Chapter 4 Was Atticus an Epicurean?
- Chapter 5 Caesar the Epicurean? A Matter of Life and Death
- Chapter 6 Otium and Voluptas: Catullus and Roman Epicureanism
- Part II Epicurus and Lucretian Postures
- Bibliography
- General Index
Summary
Catullus’ collection contains several clear echoes of the work of two contemporary Epicurean poets, Lucretius and Philodemus. Indeed, several of the neoteric poet’s central themes (the attractions of otium and disengagement from public life; patronage by members of the high elite and its pitfalls; dissatisfaction with the mos maiorum) bring him potentially into close alignment with Epicurean ideals. In this chapter, however, I argue that, on closer consideration, Catullus’ intertextual engagement with his two contemporaries points rather to a self-consciously antagonistic stance towards Epicurean ethics. Catullus’ attack on ‘Socration’ in Poem 47, combined with parodic echoes of Philodemus’ epigrams in Poems 13 and 43, bears comparison with Cicero’s deployment of anti-Epicurean clichés in the In Pisonem; similarly, Philodemean and Lucretian echoes underline a striking divergence both from Epicurean ideals of friendship and from the rejection of romantic love explicit in Lucretius and arguably implicit in Philodemus’ Xanthippe cycle.
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- Epicurus in RomePhilosophical Perspectives in the Ciceronian Age, pp. 87 - 108Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022
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