Foucault Studies, Number 22: January 2017: Foucault and Roman Antiquity: Foucault's Rome
ISSN: 1832-5203
ISSN: 1832-5203
Cover photo © Shreyaa Bhatt
Shreyaa Bhatt writes about the photo:
The Roman forum was the administrative and commercial centre of Roman civic life. Today, the site is filled with a deep, but puzzling, sense of history. Existing structures enmesh original ancient ruins dating from the Republican and Imperial periods with Christian and Renaissance facades. At the centre of the photo is the Temple of Saturn, originally dedicated in 497 BCE, and rebuilt several times over the course of the next approximately 800 years due to fire. To the left of temple is the triumphal Arch of Septimius Severus, erected in 203 CE and suggestively built in front of the Temple of Concord to imply the restoration of peace following the victories against the Parthians. Behind the arch is the Curia, the meeting place of the Roman senate, the building works of which commenced in 44 BCE by Julius Caesar and completed in 29 BCE by Augustus. The building was in use as a senatorial curia up until 630 CE, when it was converted into the church of Sant’ Adriano by Pope Honorius I. Between the major monuments which still stand, or partially stand, today are broken columns, fragmentary bases of statues and remains of old paths and stairwells, leaving a chaotic and confusing sense of a monumental past, which, in its own day would have been extraordinarily polished and orderly.
Table of Contents
Editorial
EditorialSverre Raffnsøe et al. 1-7Special Issue on Foucault and Roman Antiquity: Foucault's Rome
Richard Alston 8-30
Ika Willis 31-48
Dean Hammer 49-71
Shreyaa Bhatt 72-93
Richard Alston 94-112
James I. Porter 113-133Articles
Verena Erlenbusch 134-152
Tahseen Kazi 153-176
Navid Pourmokhtari 177-207Translations
Cuvier’s Situation in the History of BiologyLynne Huffer 208-237Interviews
Foucault and Intellectual History: An interview with Stuart Elden on his book FOUCAULT's LAST DECADE (Polity Press, 2016)Antoinette Koleva 238-253
Julian Reid on Foucault – applying his work on war, resilience, imagination and political subjectivityKristian Haug 254-262Book Reviews
Stuart Elden, Foucault’s Last Decade (Cambridge: Polity Press, 2016), 272pp, pb £17.99, ISBN: 9780745683928Kurt Borg 263-268
Paul Colilli, Agamben and the Signature of Astrology. Spheres of Potentiality (Lanham: Lexington Books, 2015), i-xx, 214 pp. hard cover, $85.00 (US) ISBN: 978-1-4985-0595-6Alain Beaulieu 269-272
Peter Sloterdijk, Philosophical Temperaments: From Plato to Foucault, trans. Thomas Dunlap (New York: Columbia University Press, 2013), ISBN: 978-0231153737Jonathan G. Wald 273-275
See AWOL's full List of Open Access Journals in Ancient Studies