Mea Roma: A Meditative Sampling from M. Valerius Martialis

Mea Roma: A Meditative Sampling from M. Valerius Martialis

by Martial (Author), Art Beck (Translator), Art Beck (Translator)

Synopsis

My project started with a dissenting translation of Martial's Book of the Spectacles. I use that term, not because I'm adapting or appropriating the text, but because the Spectacles sequence has a history of being dismissed as sub-par, early work commemorating the opening of the Colosseum. Current scholars, including Kathleen Coleman who's made the sequence somewhat of a specialty, increasingly seem to be challenging that dismissive view. Coleman also considers the dating purely speculative. I'm not attempting to join a technical and arcane historical debate. But strictly from a literary standpoint, her views on the dating free a poetic translator to exploit the same irony, double-entendre and polyvalence that imbues the greater Martial canon. The Spectacles' extended theme - the animal fights, blood sports and execution entertainments of the Arena - is, as far as I know, unique in Classical poetry. Even the over-the-top adulation of the un-named, games-presiding Caesar can take on its own cynical undertone when read in the context of Martial's hare and lion relationship with the self-styled Dominus et Deus Emperor Domitian. -Art Beck

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 132
Publisher: Shearsman Books
Published: 12 Oct 2018

ISBN 10: 184861618X
ISBN 13: 9781848616189

Author Bio
Marcus Valerius Martialis (known in English as Martial) (ca. 40 AD - ca. 103 AD) was a Roman poet born in what is now Spain, and best known for his twelve books of Epigrams, published in Rome between AD 86 and 103, during the reigns of the emperors Domitian, Nerva and Trajan. In these short, witty poems he satirises city life and the scandalous activities of his acquaintances. He wrote over 1,500 epigrams, of which over 1,200 are in elegiac couplets. Martial is regarded as the creator of the modern epigram.