Stacks of books and binders like these have been absorbing me lately, as I get ready to do a major project on Rome to complete my master's in liberal studies at Simon Fraser University. |
Anyone wondering where this once-daily blogger has
been for the last couple of months need only look at the book-piles in my
house. Brand-new, second-hand, library-borrowed, they stare at me from the
bedside table, my spot on the couch, my downstairs office; even the back of the
toilet. You try writing a blog item when Cicero’s On Duties, Livy’s The Early
History of Rome and Zygmunt Bauman’s Community
are casting beady eyes at you!
Optimistically or masochistically, probably both, I’ve
chosen to complete my master’s program at Simon Fraser University with a
75-to-100-page paper on community, mass migration and ancient Rome, instead of
the two courses I could have taken instead. Why do this, when perfecting a
three-paragraph blog item can take me hours?
Hmmm.
Because “O
tempora, o mores” (“Oh, the times! Oh the customs!”) is a phrase I’ve heard
since childhood, and now I know where it comes from (the Roman orator Cicero’s
speech against Catiline). Because the satirist Juvenal, who coined “bread and
circuses,” wrote unforgettably about how it feels to be poor and jostled,
humiliated and pushed out of his beloved city by newcomers. Because the world
is changing around us now in ways that echo some of the things that happened in
ancient Rome.
My blog will return, but for a while, I’ll be in those
stacks of books. I want to find out whether people who knew about bread and
circuses and the world’s evils more than 1,000 years ago have some messages for
us today.
Some of the books I have collected so far for my project. |
Ah...so the self torment has begun in earnest! It does sound like a fascinating topic and I hope you'll share some of your findings in your blog.
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