Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Julius Caesar, reception of

View through CrossRef
The reception of Caesar constitutes, for obvious reasons, an immense topic. As a political idea, Caesar exhibits from the very beginning a tension between his role as dictator and destroyer of the Republic and his standing as the political and military genius who founded the Empire. This contrariety, not least by way of the analytic category of Caesarism, is especially marked in the political discourse of the 19th and 20th centuries. Caesar’s literary reception, though influenced by contemporary political conflicts, is not always tethered to them in straightforward ways. The Caesar of literature is often a reaction to the Caesar of Shakespeare. And there are other important issues: Caesar as a problem in the recovery of authenticity, or Caesar, because he is a canonical author, as a symbol of the conservative claims of the established order. In art, Caesar the god and Caesar the chivalrous king gradually give way to Caesar the slain dictator or Caesar the imperious conqueror. In popular culture, however, Caesar’s manifestations vary wildly: although he continues to register at a political level, he can also signify imperial excess or martial prowess, and he is available as a medium for lampooning the various guises of his own reception.
Title: Julius Caesar, reception of
Description:
The reception of Caesar constitutes, for obvious reasons, an immense topic.
As a political idea, Caesar exhibits from the very beginning a tension between his role as dictator and destroyer of the Republic and his standing as the political and military genius who founded the Empire.
This contrariety, not least by way of the analytic category of Caesarism, is especially marked in the political discourse of the 19th and 20th centuries.
Caesar’s literary reception, though influenced by contemporary political conflicts, is not always tethered to them in straightforward ways.
The Caesar of literature is often a reaction to the Caesar of Shakespeare.
And there are other important issues: Caesar as a problem in the recovery of authenticity, or Caesar, because he is a canonical author, as a symbol of the conservative claims of the established order.
In art, Caesar the god and Caesar the chivalrous king gradually give way to Caesar the slain dictator or Caesar the imperious conqueror.
In popular culture, however, Caesar’s manifestations vary wildly: although he continues to register at a political level, he can also signify imperial excess or martial prowess, and he is available as a medium for lampooning the various guises of his own reception.

Related Results

Julius Caesar (C. Iulius Caesar)
Julius Caesar (C. Iulius Caesar)
Abstract Julius Caesar (100–44 bce ) was a politician, general, and writer who reached a unique position of supremacy in the last yea...
GAİUS JULİUS CAESAR’İN İKTİDARA YÜKSELİŞİ
GAİUS JULİUS CAESAR’İN İKTİDARA YÜKSELİŞİ
Julius Caesar sadece Roma tarihinin değil aynı zamanda antik dünyanın en önemli isimlerinden biri olarak hatırlanmaya değerdir. Şüphesiz Roma’nın köklü ailelerinden birine mensup o...
Julius Caesar: The Gallic War Books V-VI
Julius Caesar: The Gallic War Books V-VI
Books V-VI of Julius Caesar’s The Gallic War narrate Caesar’s campaigns in Britain, Gaul, and Germany in 55 and 54 BCE. His political rival Pompey was at the height of his populari...
The Embodied Will in Julius Caesar: An Introduction to Shakespeare’s Fugitive Politics
The Embodied Will in Julius Caesar: An Introduction to Shakespeare’s Fugitive Politics
The unpredictable promise of Shakespeare’s fugitive politics is perhaps best illustrated in the ritual events surrounding Caesar’s funeral depicted in Julius Ca...
The Lessons of Nostalgia in Julius Caesar and Sejanus
The Lessons of Nostalgia in Julius Caesar and Sejanus
This chapter re-examines the relationship between Julius Caesar and Ben Jonson’s Sejanus and shows how Shakespeare and Jonson employ nostalgia to different political ends. In Juliu...
Acoustic Simulation of Julius Caesar’s Battlefield Speeches
Acoustic Simulation of Julius Caesar’s Battlefield Speeches
History contains many accounts of speeches given by civic and military leaders before large crowds prior to the invention of electronic amplification. Historians have debated the h...
Alesia
Alesia
Abstract In 60 B.C. Julius Caesar entered into a political alliance with the two most powerful men in Rome, Crassus and Pompey, forming the “Triumvirate.” The three ...
Julius Caesar The Gallic War Book V
Julius Caesar The Gallic War Book V
The Latin text is accompanied by a facing-page English translation. The text displays many instances of Julius Caesar’s need to repeatedly justify his continuing command in Gaul an...

Back to Top