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In Our Time: Culture

Roman Satire

In Our Time: Culture

BBC

History

4.51K Ratings

🗓️ 22 April 2010

⏱️ 43 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss Roman Satire. Much of Roman culture was a development of their rich inheritance from the Greeks. But satire was a form the Romans could claim to have invented. The grandfather of Roman satire, Ennius, was also an important figure in early Roman literature more generally. Strikingly, he pioneered both epic and the satirical mockery of epic.But the father of the genre, Lucilius, is the writer credited with taking satire decisively towards what we now understand by the word: incisive invective aimed at particular personalities and their wrongs.All this happened under the Roman Republic, in which there was a large measure of free speech. But then the Republic was overthrown and Augustus established the Empire.The great satirist Horace had fought to save the Republic, but now reinvented himself as a loyal citizen of the Imperium. His satirical work explores the strains and hypocrisies of trying to maintain an independent sense of self at the heart of an autocracy.This struggle was deepened in the work of Persius, whose Stoicism-inflected writing was a quietist attempt to endure under the regime without challenging it.The work of the last great Roman satirist, Juvenal, was famously savage - yet his targets were either generic or long dead. So was satire a conservative or a radical genre? Was it cynical or did it aim to 'improve' people? Did it have any real impact? And was it actually funny?With:Mary BeardProfessor of Classics at Cambridge UniversityDenis FeeneyProfessor of Classics and Giger Professor of Latin at Princeton UniversityDuncan KennedyProfessor of Latin Literature and the Theory of Criticism at the University of BristolProducer: Phil Tinline.

Transcript

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0:42.0

I hope you enjoy the program.

0:44.0

Hello the ancient Romans prided themselves on inventing at least one new form of

0:49.3

literature satire and yet it's sometimes hard to pin down exactly what made Roman satire satirical.

0:55.6

It covered subjects from rat-infested taverns to the vogue for foreign cults.

1:00.1

It's little wonder that its name came from the Latin from mishmash.

1:03.0

Nevertheless, through the work of Lucilius, Horace and Juvenile in particular,

1:07.5

Roman satire was sharpened into the lacerating of canton hypocrisy,

1:11.5

whose legacy remains with us today. The story of Roman satire. of

1:13.7

can't and hypocrisy whose legacy remains with us today. The story of Roman Sata takes us from the free-booting

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