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Chapter 3 - Caesar and the Political Crisis

Christopher S. van den Berg
Affiliation:
Amherst College, Massachusetts
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Summary

Chapter 3 examines the Brutus as an intervention in contemporary politics. It begins by revisiting the preface but focuses on its discussion of the contemporary civic crisis and the immediate history of the civil war (1–25). In both the preface and the digression on Julius Caesar (254–57) Cicero presents an alternative civic vision as a response to the crisis. The chapter concludes by considering the portrayal of the younger generation of orators: Curio (filius), Caelius, Publius Crassus, and Marcellus. The last figure merits special attention because Cicero’s oratorical canon includes only two living figures: Marcellus and Caesar. Marcellus is accorded a prominent role as part of Cicero’s attempt to offer a coherent vision of the republic, one based on the restoration of the senatorial elite and the reinstatement of the traditional institutions of government.

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Chapter
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The Politics and Poetics of Cicero's Brutus
The Invention of Literary History
, pp. 75 - 101
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2021

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