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  • Published: 16 May 2016
  • ISBN: 9780718193508
  • Imprint: Penguin Press
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 272
  • RRP: $29.99
Categories:

Seneca

A Life




The definitive biography of ancient Rome's most powerful and colourful philosopher-politician

This book traces the eventful life of Seneca, the Roman philosopher, dramatist, essayist and rhetorician of the first century CE, who came from Spain to Rome, spent his youth in Egypt, was exiled to Corsica under Claudius but recalled after eight years, and rose to dizzying heights of wealth, power and social influence under Nero, before falling from favour and being forced to kill himself. The book analyzes the relationship of Seneca's life story to his literary self-fashioning, and the tensions between the external worlds of politics, consumerism, and social success, with the Stoic ideals of asceticism, virtue and self-control.

  • Published: 16 May 2016
  • ISBN: 9780718193508
  • Imprint: Penguin Press
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 272
  • RRP: $29.99
Categories:

Praise for Seneca

Seneca lived in a world where dissimulation was a way of life, and the confusion between reality and failure woven into the very fabric of the state. It is the mirror he holds up to it which makes him such a great and unsettling writer, and which Wilson's fine biography does so much to explicate

Tom Holland, Telegraph

Absorbing

Observer

Morally our author is tough on Seneca, contrasting, for example, his lickspittle approach to Nero with Boudicca's resistance. But she is a persuasive extoller of his writing and the final chapter about his diverse legacy is breathtaking

Spectator

The most famous and poignant example of a philosopher trying and spectacularly failing to improve a ruler, is that of the Roman Stoic Seneca, whose life is wonderfully retold here by the classicist Emily Wilson

Sunday Times

This is a riveting and complete picture of Seneca's complex and compromised life. It is impeccably researched, carefully structured, and written with admirable brio. For good or ill, ours is a Senecan age

Simon Critchley, The New School for Social Research

A fresh, perceptive, and in-depth look at the enigmatic Seneca, giving us a nuanced perspective into the conflicted mind and motives of the philosopher who embraced lofty Stoic ideals while serving Nero and amassing great wealth in the process. I honestly could not put it down, it is so insightful and well written and yes -- suspenseful, even though we know the ending

Margaret George, author of Elizabeth I: The Novel and Helen of Troy: A Novel