Author:
Fernández-Götz Manuel,Maschek Dominik,Roymans Nico
Abstract
This debate piece offers a critique of some recent ‘new materialist’ approaches and their application to Roman expansionism, particularly those positing that the study of ‘Romanisation’ should be about ‘understanding objects in motion’—a perspective that carries important political and ethical implications. Here, the authors introduce the alternative notion of a ‘predatory’ political economy for conceptualising Late Republican and Early Imperial Rome. The aim is to illuminate the darker sides of Roman expansionism in order to produce more balanced and inclusive accounts. Two cases studies—the archaeology of the Roman conquest and of rural communities—illustrate the potential of such a perspective.
Subject
General Arts and Humanities,Archaeology
Reference46 articles.
1. Ethnic Identity and Imperial Power
2. Roman imperialism and the transformation of rural society in a frontier province;Roymans;Britannia,2020
Cited by
39 articles.
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