Meckler, 'Political Dissidence under Nero: The Price of Dissimulation', Bryn Mawr Classical Review 9508
URL = http://hegel.lib.ncsu.edu/stacks/serials/bmcr/bmcr-9508-meckler-political
@@@@95.9.21, Rudich, Political Dissidence under Nero
Vasily Rudich, Political Dissidence under Nero: The Price of
Dissimulation. New York: Routledge, 1993. Pp. 354. $49.95.
ISBN 0-415-06951-3.
Reviewed by Michael Meckler -- University of Michigan
It is quite difficult for those of us brought up in late
20th-century Western democracies to understand the machinations
of an authoritarian regime such as that of imperial Rome. The
disgruntled of today can either use or threaten to use the ballot
box to bring change to the tone, direction or personnel of
government. Dissent is fairly well channeled into constitutional
process, and the complaints heard last year on talk-radio call-in
programs become, through elections, this year's government
policies.
Yet we have had in our lifetimes some glimpse through others'
experiences on the operation of dissent in authoritarian regimes-
-for example, in the now not-so-recently departed Soviet Union
and its one-time satellites in Eastern Europe. Vasily Rudich was
brought up in the Soviet world and has first-hand experience with
trying to effect change in that authoritarian system, experience
he has called upon in trying to explain the behavior of leading
aristocrats under Rome's fifth emperor in the book Political
dissidence under Nero.
R.'s use of his Soviet experience is rarely explicit and never
heavy-handed. Rather, it operates as a subtle motif from which R.
has developed a model of dissident behavior. Those drawn into
dissidence are forced to balance their desire for change with the
dangers inherent in trying to bring any change about. Hence they
must always show caution and often compromise their own values in
order to survive. Dissidents are forced to lie, hide their true
feelings and take part in distasteful behavior to hold on to
their positions; in other words, they must go along to get along.
Few are able to maintain this level of dissimulation. Some
make mistakes, others give up the game entirely, bringing about
their own destruction without changing the system at all.
R.'s purpose is to examine the mindset of those individuals
whom scholars a generation ago might have called the "opposition"
to Nero, and from this mindset try to explain these individuals'
various behavior. Some historians may not appreciate R.'s attempt
at what he describes as "historical psychology" (pp.xi, 245), but
understanding motivation is often crucial to understanding the
resulting actions. R.'s model of dissident behavior is refreshing
and enlightening, and it makes his book an important work for
those examining the politics of the Neronian age.
The book is organized in a rough chronological order, from
Nero's accession to the fall of Galba. Because R. is concerned
with individuals, the narrative introduces a figure through a
particular event, then chronologically jumps backward for
introductory material and then forward to describe the behavior
at that event and its outcome. If the outcome is not death and
the individual does not have a significant role later in the
narrative, R. may well move forward to describe the rest of the
individual's career in the Flavian period and beyond. Once R. has
completed his vignette of one individual, his narrative either
returns to discuss other individuals involved in the same event
or moves on to the next event.
An example of one of the most thought-provoking of these
vignettes is that concerning Faenius Rufus, the praetorian
prefect executed in the wake of the Pisonian conspiracy
(pp.114-19). The story comes from Tacitus' description of the
plot in Annals 15.48-74, with special attention to 15.66.
Faenius Rufus had been involved in the conspiracy, but once the
plot had been discovered he turned around and became one of the
fiercest inquisitors against his own co-conspirators--a pose that
lasted only until those co-conspirators turned him in.
"This whole tale sounds very modern," R. writes, "as if it
were the fiction of a Dostoevsky or a Nabokov. What comes to mind
are stories of double agents or agents provocateurs who
have so adapted themselves to their role that they cease to
understand which of the two causes they work for is real and lose
all contact with reality, so that today's prosecutor turns into
tomorrow's defendant" (p.119).
R. is a particularly sympathetic reader of Tacitus, and
fundamentally R.'s study is a commentary on the Neronian books of
the Annals and the early part of the Histories. R.
appreciates Tacitean nuance and massages additional meaning from
the historian's descriptions. Significantly, the least satisfying
section of the book deals with the downfall of Domitius Corbulo
(pp.198-208), an event for which R. must rely primarily on
epitomators of Dio because Tacitus' description has not survived.
Some aspects of the book's format may prove frustrating. The
book was written without numbered notes; instead, for each
chapter an additional discussion with bibliography is provided at
the end of the book. This makes a chore out of hunting down
references to secondary literature for R.'s interpretations of
events. (References to primary sources are included in
parentheses in the main text.) The lack of numbered notes also
forces R. to make frequent use of parentheses in the main text to
introduce supporting evidence that is not relevant to his main
argument. Finally, R. is perhaps too fond of the use of quotation
marks to indicate names or labels that are peculiarly defined
(e.g., "sexual dissident," a term appearing regularly and always
in quotation marks to refer to Otho in order to indicate when
Otho's behavior vis-a-vis Nero may have sprung from their rivalry
over the affections of Poppaea Sabina).
Moreover, those looking for insight on Nero's character will
be disappointed. Like a distant head-of-state in more recent
authoritarian regimes, Nero remains a shadowy figure in R.'s book
who is often labeled as cruel and sadistic but is always viewed
from afar. This aspect, however, is part of R.'s plan, for he is
interested not in how authority figures govern but rather in how
other political figures accommodate themselves to that
government.
R.'s book should also be distinguished from Shadi Bartsch's
recent examination of literature and imperial politics (Actors
in the audience [Harvard, 1994]). Bartsch explains
descriptions of Nero's behavior and the reactions of others in
terms of theatricality, of life as performance, while R. uses a
very different paradigm to give sharper focus to the political
role of the Roman senate under Nero. R. may well examine more
literary issues in his promised study of the "rhetoricized
mentality" of Neronian literature (p.xxxi), which, if as
stimulating as his current book, should be eagerly anticipated.
Political dissidence under Nero is a thoughtful and
thought-provoking understanding of the behavior of Roman
aristocrats under the last of the Julio-Claudians. Its author has
produced an important study for those seeking insight into the
Neronian age.