SOCIAL AND CULTURAL HISTORY OF THE ROMAN WORLD

Academic Year 2015/2016 - 2° Year
Teaching Staff: Gaetano Maria ARENA
Credit Value: 6
Scientific field: L-ANT/03 - ROMAN HISTORY
Taught classes: 36 hours
Term / Semester:

Detailed Course Content

- concept of social and cultural “marginality” in contemporary sociology and historiography and its application to the ancient world
- description of the main groups of marginals, i.e. beggars, strangers (homeless, seasonal workers, shepherds, slaves, pilgrims), “infames” (actors, gladiators, wizards) and criminals (thieves, robbers, prisoners), even if it’s difficult to identify distinct categories of marginals in the concrete social and cultural life of the West in Late Antiquity (III-VI century AD)
- analysis of the sources that describe certain “pathologies” of society, as they were perceived at the level of the dominant culture; assessment of the measures taken by the secular and ecclesiastical institutions towards marginals, for whom were sometimes provided care systems and/or corrective methods for recovery of deviance, for rehabilitation, reintegration and rehabilitation work; sometimes, on the contrary, were taken attitudes of moral condemnation and/or regulatory measures of prevention, repression, punishment and detention


Textbook Information

V. Neri, I marginali nell’Occidente tardoantico. Poveri, ‘infames’ e criminali nella nascente società cristiana, Bari Edipuglia 1998, pp. 7-500.