Social Control in Late Antiquity: The Violence of Small Worlds
Conflict and Social Control in Late Antiquity examines how the cultivation and application of violence across a range of ‘small worlds’ contributed to the making of society in the late Roman period. From households and families to schoolrooms and monasteries, chapters address the different roles that violence played in maintaining and reinforcing the social order, even during a period of intense religious and political change. Elites adopted a range of approaches – formal and informal, legal and illegal, private and public – to keep subordinates in their place. Especially important were the efforts of social elites to inculcate in their followers the idea that the social order was natural rather than contingent and therefore should not be challenged, but rather perpetuated. Chapters focus on written sources from the fourth and fifth centuries, mainly on Christian authors. Collectively, they show that rather than seeking to transform the fortunes of those who were most vulnerable in society (slaves, women, children), such writers drew creatively on pre-existing discursive traditions, in the process reproducing and (occasionally) attempting to mitigate the plight of the downtrodden.
History
School affiliated with
- Lincoln School of Humanities and Heritage (Research Outputs)
Publication Title
Social Control in Late Antiquity: The Violence of Small WorldsPublisher
Cambridge University PressExternal DOI
ISBN
9781108479394Date Submitted
2020-04-17Date Accepted
2020-10-01Date of First Publication
2020-10-01Date of Final Publication
2020-10-01Open Access Status
- Not Open Access