Gowing, 'Caesar and the Crisis of the Roman Aristocracy', Bryn Mawr Classical Review 9502
URL = http://hegel.lib.ncsu.edu/stacks/serials/bmcr/bmcr-9502-gowing-caesar
@@@@95.2.10, Ruebel, Caesar and the Crisis of the Roman Aristocracy
James S. Ruebel, Caesar and the Crisis of the Roman
Aristocracy. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1994.
Pp. xx, 189, 4 maps. $18.95. ISBN 0-8061-2590-X.
Reviewed by Alain M. Gowing -- University of Washington
As the subtitle indicates, this book is a Civil War
Reader, a classroom text intended for "a course in Latin for
advanced undergraduate or graduate students." The text consists
principally of selections from du Pontet's OCT of Caesar's
Commentarii de bello civili (a little over half of Book 1,
the bulk of the chapters on the military operations in Spain
being omitted, and about a third of Book 3) which are arranged in
eight chapters. The passages from Caesar are interspersed with
translated selections from Cicero's Epistulae (a few from
Pompey and Caesar are quoted in Latin) and a snippet or two of
Cassius Dio. Since I was to teach the Bellum Civile last
summer to just the sort of class Ruebel (R.) envisioned, I
decided to give the book a trial run. The twelve students in the
class were asked to write their own evaluations of the text, and
their many useful insights are gratefully incorporated in this
review.
The selections are accompanied by a commentary, placed
beneath the relevant text, which is largely historical in nature
and keeps the reader on track with the who, what, when and where
questions that inevitably confront those encountering the complex
history of this period for the first time. Despite R.'s
disclaimer that the commentary will not focus on "small points of
vocabulary or grammar" (p. xvii), the notes do in fact provide a
fair amount of grammatical assistance in the form of translation
or brief explanations. A substantial and quite helpful
Introduction places the civil war between Pompey and Caesar in a
political and social context. Four appendices (a chronological
gazette, a note on Roman names, a brief discussion of the Roman
legion, an explanation of the pre-Julian calendar), a short
bibliography and an index nominum round out the book. The
book, it should be noted, is built to last: it is hardcover (with
a gold-embossed red leatherette cover), and the signatures are
sewn rather than glued.
The concept of such readers is certainly not new, and for
this period in particular the idea has merit. Reading the
Bellum Civile in conjunction with Cicero's
Epistulae is a valuable exercise, and a book that brings
the material together, or at least some of it, in a comparatively
inexpensive fashion should be welcome. But R. has done more than
that. The selections have been made with very specific purposes
in mind, as he discusses in detail in the Preface. There R.
asserts that the events and persons of this period "require our
evaluation in their historical moment in a way that will not
permit detachment or neutrality." He adds, "...the study of
Caesar provides not only a feeling of participation in exciting
and momentous events but also the opportunity for rigorous
humanistic inquiry into questions of value, morality, and
political action and expediency" (p. xv). And further, "The
intent of this course is to provide a view of Caesar that can be
attacked or defended by the reader. The assumption will be that
neutrality to Caesar is neither desirable nor possible; the
reader, in other words, must confront the same choices that
Cicero and others had to make in this period of civil upheaval"
(p. xvi). To that end R. has chosen passages to illustrate
Caesar's qualities as a "politician, statesman, and propagandist"
(p. xv).
With these ambitious aims in mind, R. directs the reading by
drawing attention to the nuances of Caesar's presentation of
events and including contrasting points of view as evidenced
primarily in Cicero's letters. This seems at first glance like a
sensible exercise. But putting the material before students and
explicating it is one thing, interpreting it for them is quite
another; and in this respect R., true to his own injunction, is
seldom neutral. To cite one obvious instance, when R. comes to a
critical crux early in Book 1--Caesar's apparent fudging of what
he knew and when he knew it before crossing the Rubicon ca.
January 11/12 of 49--he comes to Caesar's defense. Although R.
concedes that this is an example of "clear misrepresentation,"
between Civ. 1.6 and 7 he inserts an explanation (which is
admittedly not new) to the effect that Caesar is not "rearranging
events in his interest" but rather following an ancient
historiographical convention that dictated how simultaneously
occurring events could be represented. This apology is later
repeated, in a note to Civ. 1.10 arguing that "Caesar's
aim is not to obfuscate the issues" (p. 60, n. 87). R.'s
certainty notwithstanding, it is very difficult to come to any
firm conclusions on this point, particularly in light of the
competing evidence from other sources such as Suetonius or Dio.
R. fails to mention that such evidence exists (or the extent of
scholarly debate on the subject), and as a result his explanation
looks far more persuasive than it really is.
Yet in the face of difficulties such as these--and there are
many (in both Caesar's text and R.'s commentary)--one should
advise rather than discourage "detachment" and "neutrality" or
(better yet) concentrate on other matters. To be sure, R. rarely
fails to note problematic passages and is quick to point out
occasions when Caesar represents matters in a manner most
favorable to himself, but in general R. glosses over the
complexities of the historical interpretation, usually to
Caesar's benefit. He includes, for instance, Dio's account of
the mutiny and subsequent decimation of Caesar's army near
Placentia as he was returning from the campaign in Spain. Caesar
notoriously omits all mention of this episode, although it is
attested in several sources, and R. rightly points out that to
have included it would have tarnished the author's image as an
effective leader. R. should have stopped there, but instead he
adds that actually the event demonstrated "how Caesar could
command the respect and obedience of recalcitrant troops by sheer
force of personality" (p. 119). The decimation he inflicted
probably had something to do with it as well. In short, there is
an alternative, less sympathetic, and equally plausible reading
of the Bellum Civile that R. seldom articulates but
frequently and rather too vigorously refutes.
Cynthia Damon has recently formulated an eminently sensible
approach to teaching the Bellum Civile ("Caesar's
Practical Prose," CJ 89.2 [1994] 183-95). It is an
approach with which I fully agree, but for several reasons it
would be difficult to implement Damon's approach with R.'s book.
My principal quarrel with Caesar and the Crisis of the Roman
Aristocracy therefore has less to do with its overall quality
and more with the way I prefer to read and teach Caesar. R. has
little to say, for example, about Caesar's style and the literary
qualities of his writing. For someone convinced that the
way Caesar writes is as interesting as what he
writes, a commentary that fails to address these matters is less
useful than one that does. The selections also severely restrict
the extent to which one can pursue other aspects of the Bellum
Civile. R. omits much of the military narrative in Books 1
and 3, and all of Book 2, though it is in these passages
(especially the controversial 'Curio-tragedy' of Book 2) that we
can best appreciate Caesar's skill as a writer and even as a
"propagandist." R. assiduously notes recurrent themes and
provides cursory summaries of the omitted portions, but despite
this one loses any real feel for the unity of the text, the care
with which events are structured and described, or the function
of repeated scenes and motifs. In addition, the absence of any
critical apparatus is regrettable. In a text as bedeviled by
textual problems as the Bellum Civile, it is necessary to
be aware of just how tenuous many readings are and the extent to
which they affect our interpretations. R. maintains that he
feels "strongly that not even undergraduates are damaged by being
made aware of the difficult state of our texts" (p. xix) and he
even offers a few emendations of his own, but he rarely draws
attention to any of these difficulties, and the reader must
inevitably conclude that they really do not matter all that much.
That fact alone, in my view, renders the text unsuitable for an
advanced Latin class.
R.'s text presents a few problems of its own. There are
several unfortunate typos, notable simply because they render the
Latin incomprehensible (e.g., "amicorum" for "armorum,"
"adiutorem" for "adiutor," "nisi" for "misi," "dimmitat" for
"dimittat"); or slips that confuse the historical situation
(Caralis is erroneously located in Sicily rather than Sardinia;
Lentulus Spinther is at one point confounded with Domitius
Ahenobarbus). In several places du Pontet's text has been
repunctuated, often with unhappy results (e.g., 1.26.2,
3.43.2-3). On a couple of occasions R. prints a reading not
adopted by du Pontet in the OCT without acknowledging the fact,
contrary to the promise of p. xix. Thus, for example, at 1.14.5
we find "familias" for the OCT's "familiaris," with no
explanation despite the fact that the former reading, which is
favored by Klotz in his Teubner edition, alters the tone of the
passage.
In R.'s defense, he has fulfilled the promise of the
Preface; students who use this text will indeed learn something
about the nature of the war between Caesar and Pompey, and in
fact the book works best (as it was meant to) as a study in the
personal and political conflicts that lay behind the war.
Students and teachers can be assured, moreover, that they will be
using a text compiled by a scholar who has clearly studied the
period in some depth. As a means of studying Caesar's Bellum
Civile, however, the book has limitations. If the point of
one's course is to acquire a deep familiarity with the Bellum
Civileand its associated problems (historical,
historiographical, textual, etc.)--as I would prefer in a Latin
class for advanced undergraduates and graduate students--students
will be better advised to use the OCT and consult John Carter's
recently completed two-volume edition and commentary published by
Aris & Phillips (1991-93).