Communicating Public Opinion in the Roman Republic

Communicating Public Opinion in the Roman Republic

€70.00*

Prices incl. VAT, if applicable plus handling costs

Delivery to Germany only. Use our contact form for foreign inquiries.

available, deliverable in approx. 2-4 working days

From assemblies to courts of justice, from the Senate to the battlefield, from Rome to the provinces: public opinion could vary and take many guises. Roman politicians were aware of its existence and influence, and engaged with it.

This book offers a study of public opinion in the Roman Republic, with an emphasis from the 3rd to 1st centuries BC. It focusses on four main issues: nature and components of public opinion; public opinion in relation to military and administrative questions; the interaction between public opinion and public dialogue and, finally, the transmission of public opinion. It furthermore asks the following question: Who was the populus Romanus? How did public opinion influence specific political or military decisions? Can Habermas' view of public opinion be applied to the Roman Republic? How was the rhetoric of fear applied to public opinion?

Drawing on the more recent interpretations of Roman Republic, this volume studies the mechanisms that make public opinion and politics work at many different levels. It provides an engaging view on political communication and the interaction between the elite and the people.

Series Historia – Einzelschriften
Volume 256
ISBN 978-3-515-12172-9
Media type Book - Hardcover
Edition number 1.
Copyright year 2019
Publisher Franz Steiner Verlag
Length 304 pages
Illustrations 2 b/w figs.
Size 17.0 x 24.0 cm
Language English