Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Embodying the statue: Silvae 1.1 and 4.6
- 3 Engendering the house: Silvae 1.2 and 3.4
- 4 Imperial pastoral: Vopiscus' villa in Silvae 1.3
- 5 Dominating nature: Pollius' villa in Silvae 2.2
- 6 Reading the Thebaid: Silvae 1.5
- 7 The emperor's Saturnalia: Silvae 1.6
- 8 Dining with the emperor: Silvae 4.2
- 9 Building the imperial highway: Silvae 4.3
- References
- Index locorum
- Index of subjects and proper names
3 - Engendering the house: Silvae 1.2 and 3.4
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Embodying the statue: Silvae 1.1 and 4.6
- 3 Engendering the house: Silvae 1.2 and 3.4
- 4 Imperial pastoral: Vopiscus' villa in Silvae 1.3
- 5 Dominating nature: Pollius' villa in Silvae 2.2
- 6 Reading the Thebaid: Silvae 1.5
- 7 The emperor's Saturnalia: Silvae 1.6
- 8 Dining with the emperor: Silvae 4.2
- 9 Building the imperial highway: Silvae 4.3
- References
- Index locorum
- Index of subjects and proper names
Summary
Her snowy neck like to a marble tower,
And all her body like a palace fair,
Ascending up, with many a stately stair,
To honor's seat and chastity's sweet bower.
Edmund Spenser, EpithalamionSilv. 1. 1 and 4. 6 stand at opposite ends of the poetic and political spectrum in Statius' poetry book. Statius' poetry of praise, however, contains a variety of negotiatory positions. This chapter will consider two poems that once again structurally and thematically complement one another, Silv. 1. 2 and Silv. 3. 4. They are admittedly addressed to people of very different social status – in Silv. 1. 2 the aristocratic Stella and his new wife Violentilla, in Silv. 3. 4 Domitian's court eunuch Earinus. Yet both poems explore social and sexual identity through the domestic space of a grand house and palace respectively. Gender and architecture are here integral to both the reinforcement and the questioning of traditional values in the Flavian age. Indeed, the literary construction of a woman and a eunuch through their houses implicitly raises the question of what constitutes ‘Romanness’ at the end of the first century ad.
Silv. 1. 2 celebrates the marriage of a couple who were fairly prominent figures within Roman society, Arruntius Stella and his wife Violentilla. Stella is the subject of several poems by Martial. Silv. 1. 2 tells us that at the time of his marriage Stella was one of the quindecimviri (176–7), hoping, it seems, for further speedy advancement (174–81).
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- Information
- Statius' Silvae and the Poetics of Empire , pp. 88 - 118Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2002