Cicero and Editorial Revision

2007 ◽  
Vol 26 (1) ◽  
pp. 49-80 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sean Gurd

Abstract In this essay I discuss Cicero's practice of submitting his texts to others for comment, arguing that the mutual reading and correction of friends' works played an important social function. By discussing what would make a text better, Cicero and his collaborators worked to forge and maintain social ties. In addition, I pursue an important corollary: for a text to provoke this activity, it must present itself as unfinished or in progress. Cicero was aware of this corollary, and in the Brutus he used images of textual incompletion to critique Atticist and Caesarian theories of style as solitary, antisocial, and implicitly autocratic. This led him to formulate an important new literary politics, which he put into practice in the years after Pompey's defeat in the civil war.

Author(s):  
Marvin T. Brown

AbstractThe progress and now the danger of American Prosperity has relied on the treatment of the Earth as “land.” The story of “lands” around the Atlantic include people viewing the Earth as “Mother,” as “sacred,” and a gift, and as a thing. While the English Common Law treated land as property, the Latin/Roman view saw land as having a “social function.” This view seems implicit in the decision of freed Blacks after the Civil War to choose sharecropping over wages. They believed that “the tillers of the soil should be guaranteed possession of the land” (from the Creed of the Southern Tenant Farmers’ Union). Returning to the sharecroppers’ desire opens the possibility of changing the current course of history by taking reciprocity or “balanced social relations” as our guiding star. Balancing social relations would entail reparations of unbalanced relations and sharing a city’s land wealth with all the city’s inhabitants.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Caroline A. Hartzell ◽  
Matthew Hoddie
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Allan G. Bogue
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Author(s):  
Jonathan D. Smele
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Author(s):  
Barbara F. Walter
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Author(s):  
Lars-Erik Cederman ◽  
Kristian Skrede Gleditsch ◽  
Halvard Buhaug
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