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Feldherr, andrew. 2013. “free spirits: sallust and the citation of catiline.” ajp 134:50-‐66.
The Music of Time: Sallust's Sempronia (Cat. Part III: Historiography-Lyric Poetry, Erotic Epistolography and Epigram. Andrew M. Feldherr. Ed., Cambridge, “Free Spirits: Sallust and the Citation of Catiline.” AJP (): “Viewing, Myth, and . FELDHERR Cambridge Companion to the Roman Historians. Andrew M. Riggsby b, in her typology of practices of historiographic citation, Sallust describes the qualities of Catiline as follows. By raising the question of whether Catiline or Cicero counts as the author of the phrase, Sallust invites attention to the double nature of historiography as at once a literary representation of reality and a part of the historical processes it documents. Sallust’s account of Catiline’s first speech contains a verbal echo of Cicero’s First Catilinarian (BC ~ Cat. ). American Journal of Philology (1) () Abstract Sallust's account of Catiline's first speech contains a verbal echo of Cicero's First Catilinarian. By raising the question of whether Catiline or Cicero counts as the author of the phrase, Sallust invites attention to the double nature of historiography as at. Andrew Feldherr. Bonner, S. F. () Roman Declamation in the . Bloomer, W. M. ( b) “ Schooling in persona: imagination and subordination in Roman education,” CA 57 – Google Scholar.