Memory in Ancient Rome and Early Christianity
Edited by Karl Galinsky
Table of Contents
Preface
List of Figures
List of Contributors
Introduction, Karl Galinsky
Part I: Memory and Roman Writers
1. Memory as Motive in Tacitus, Alain Gowing
2. Forgetful Theseus and Mindful Aeneas in Catullus 64 and Aeneid 4, Brigitte Libby
3. Knowledge of Religion in Valerius Maximus' exempla: Roman Historiography and Tiberian Memory Culture, Jorg Rupke
Part II: Memory and Roman Emperors
4. Augustan Reconstruction and Roman Memory, Eric Orlin
5. Qualis artifex pereo: The Generation of Roman Memories of Nero, Charles Hedrick, Jr.
Part III: Roman Honorific Statues: Memory or Just Honour?
6. In the Web of (Hi)stories: memoria: Monuments and Their Myth-historical 'Interconnectedness', Karl-Joachim Holkeskamp
7. Marius, Sulla, and the War over Monumental Memory and Public Space, Elke Stein-Holkeskamp
8. Monuments, Memory, and Status Recognition in Roman Asia Minor, Diana Ng
Part IV: Memory in Roman Religion and Early Christianity
9. The Crafting of Memory in Late Roman Mortuary Spaces, Nicola Denzey-Lewis
10. Memory, Performance and the Sayings of Jesus, John Kloppemborg
11. Sweet Memory: Archaeological Evidence of Jesus in Jerusalem, Jodi Magness
12. Moving Peter to Rome: Social Memory and Ritualized Space After 70 CE, Milton Moreland
Part V: A Perspective from Neuropsychology
13. The Neuroscience of Memory, Ann-Kathrin Stock, Hannah,Gajsar, and Onur Gunturkun
Index