Papers by Eleni Hall Manolaraki
Arethusa, 2024
This article explores the use of Isis and her associated deities in the rhetoric of Christian apo... more This article explores the use of Isis and her associated deities in the rhetoric of Christian apologia, with Minucius and Tertullian as case studies. Apologists center the chronological, geographical, and political malleability of the Isiac deities in order to undermine those gods' perceived power and to claim a space for Christians in Rome's marketplace of religions. Parsing the apologetic construction of the Gens Isiaca illuminates Christianity in the second century and hence adds to our knowledge about the transition between its Apostolic and Constantinian periods. Furthermore, since Christian responses to Egypt belong to the turn from classical to late antiquity, the discussion also contributes to the broader conversation concerning Egypt's role in western intellectual history.
Dynamics of Marginality: Liminal Character and Marginal Groups in Neronian and Flavian Literature, 2023
This chapter studies grafting in Pliny's Natural History. Noting grafting's metaphorical suitabil... more This chapter studies grafting in Pliny's Natural History. Noting grafting's metaphorical suitability to represent social relations, Manolaraki argues that Pliny's use of grafting can be seen as crafting a narrative of Vespasian and critica~ aspects ~f his reign. Contextualizing previous arboreal castings of imperial power, specifically as an apt metaphor for Julio-Claudian succession, Manolaraki discusses how Pliny's use of grafting suggests Vespasian as a 'splice' into that Julio-Claudian tree. This Vespasianic graft corresponds both to Vespasian's peripheral background and his innovations as emperor. As the progenitor of a new dynasty and one who projected Italic traditions at Rome, his reign finds a fiting expression in grafting. Pliny's use of grafting in the Natural History parallels Vespasian's assertion of his peripheral, marginal, characteristics into the center of Rome and Roman politics. • •
Interdisciplinary Humanities, 2021
The article examines appropriations of classical myths by Mark Kostabi (b.1960) a successful Esth... more The article examines appropriations of classical myths by Mark Kostabi (b.1960) a successful Esthonian-American Postmodernist working in diverse mediums.
Journal of the Botanical Research Institute of Texas, 2017
For optimal communication, each taxonomic name ideally has one proper spelling. The specific epit... more For optimal communication, each taxonomic name ideally has one proper spelling. The specific epithet of Bartram’s Ixia has usually been spelled as coelestina, which is incorrect and contrary to the International Code of Nomenclature for Algae, Fungi, and Plants. In the protologue, Bartram originally spelled it as caelestina, which is an acceptable Latin form that ought to be adopted. The ae variant has been utilized and accepted for names of several other taxa since Bartram. The proper spelling of the basionym of Bartram’s Ixia is Ixia caelestina.
A Companion to Tacitus, 2012
... The Page 415. 396 Eleni Manolaraki and Antony Augoustakis alienation implied in diuersum dist... more ... The Page 415. 396 Eleni Manolaraki and Antony Augoustakis alienation implied in diuersum distinctly conjures the eschatological conceit ofthe sea as the ultimate boundary (cf. Mela 1.68. 4, 1.89. 5; Ov., Tr. 3.2. 10; Plin., Nat. ... Quid est tandem, di boni, quod laboremus? ...
Classical Philology 100 (2005) 243-267
Classical Journal 107 (2012) 290-311
Religion and Ritual in Flavian Epic (2013), 89-107
Autour de Pline le Jeune: en hommage à Nicole Méthy (2015), 245-258
American Journal of Philology 136 (2015), 633-667
This article proposes a reading of the balsam in the Natural History (12.111–23) through the soci... more This article proposes a reading of the balsam in the Natural History (12.111–23) through the socio-historical construct of Botanical Imperialism: the physical and cognitive appropriations of flora to establish cultural primacy. Pliny's construction of the balsam engages with Flavian preoccupations such as Rome's economic recovery after the civil war, the integration of Judaea into the empire, Titus' self-presentation as conqueror, and the influence of eastern luxury. Discerning the ideological dimensions of the balsam contributes towards scholarship on the literary qualities of the Natural History, and sets Pliny's botany in the context of comparative work on imperialism and the natural sciences.
Illinois Classical Studies 37 (2012), 175-198
Brill´s Companion to Lucan, 153-182, 2009
At Cleopatra's banquet in Lucan's book 10 Caesar asks the Egyptian Acoreus to reveal the source o... more At Cleopatra's banquet in Lucan's book 10 Caesar asks the Egyptian Acoreus to reveal the source of the Nile but receives a lengthy, evasive reply on the planetary influences on the Nile, on theories of its flood, and on its course through eastern Africa. This essay establishes the thematic coherence of this Nilescape within the scientific and ethical economy of the epic. First, Acoreus' Nilescape responds to earlier, hostile references to the Nile and contrasts a cosmological view of the river to those terrestrial perspectives. Second, Lucan's juxtaposition of these two views draws from st century ce stoicism, particularly Seneca's cosmology in the Natural Questions.
Classical Philology 103 (2008) 374-394
Illinois Classical Studies 43 (2018) 207-233
A Companion to Tacitus, 2012
Brill's Companion to Silius Italicus, 2009
After 69 CE: Civil War in Flavian Literature (2018), 341-361
Book Reviews by Eleni Hall Manolaraki
Classical Philology, 2019
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Papers by Eleni Hall Manolaraki
Book Reviews by Eleni Hall Manolaraki
Vespasian's Alexandrian uprising, his recognition of Egypt as his power basis, and his patronage of Isis re-conceptualize Egypt past the ideology of Augustan conquest. The imperialistic exhilaration and moral angst attending Rome's Flavian cosmopolitanism find an expressive means in the geographically and semantically nebulous Nile. The rapprochement with Egypt continues in the second and early third centuries. The "Hellenic" Antonines and the African-Syrian Severans expand perceptions of geography and identity within an increasingly decentralized and diverse empire. In the political and cultural discourses of this period, the capacious symbolics of Egypt validate the empire's religious and ethnic pluralism.
Consider these questions with insights from followership theory (Kelley’s “five follower types”) and Roman philosophy. We will travel to the Roman Empire, an era when followership was literally a matter of life or death. Our focal episode is a debate between two Roman senators, as recorded by the historian Cornelius Tacitus (56–120 CE). Tacitus’ historical works, which narrate the reigns of the early Roman emperors (14–96 CE), portray some of them as power-mad and dangerous, easily the worst leaders
in history. Hence the topic of the debate: is it possible to be a good follower of a bad emperor?
questions about leadership by examining the last day of the Elder Pliny, a scholar and navy officer of the Roman Empire. Stationed in the Bay of Naples in 79 C.E., Pliny woke up one August morning to see Mt. Vesuvius erupt across the waters from his fleet. In that moment, he made a life-changing choice: rather than seek shelter, he rushed to evacuate friends stranded near the exploding mountain.
This case takes you through Pliny’s journey to Vesuvius, asking you to take on his dilemmas and decisions as he unknowingly proceeds to his death. By putting yourself in Pliny’s position you will challenge your ideas about leadership, and you will determine whether you have the courage to guide others
Germani do not recognize leadership as superior to followership.
Spanning 1,300 years, this popular history of Rome has been thoroughly revised and updated, reinforcing its stature as an indispensable resource on the history and enduring influence of one of the world's greatest empires.
New format: two-color text throughout; new pedagogical features, such as glossary terms in margins; chronological tables and genealogies are made clearer for student use
Includes revised text throughout, updated guides to further reading, and new sources for Roman history
Expands coverage of the late Republic period
Retains its emphasis on the importance of multi-disciplinary interpretations of literary sources and new archaeological evidence