Space, memory and ideology in Statius' Silvae
: applying Nora's concept of lieux de mémoire to a Flavian poet

  • Coen Willem Schuurmans Stekhoven

Student thesis: Doctoral Thesis (PhD)

Abstract

In my thesis I investigate the interaction between space, memory and ideology in Statius Silvae. Previous scholarship on the Silvae tends to focus on matters of ideology, perceiving Statius’
encomiastic message as either subservient of submissive. I try to get away from this two-sided debate by focusing on Statius’ use of memory instead, using the concept of lieux de mémoire coined
by the French historian Pierre Nora. As some scholars have noted (most notably Geyssen and Newlands) the Silvae are quite unique in using spatial and architectural descriptions as the main
principle of organization for individual poems. What makes Statius’ approach truly unique in my opinion, however, is his tendency to tap into memories associated with specific locations. In the
imperial poems of the Silvae, which are devoted to Domitian, Statius uses these sites of great symbolical and cultural significance, which Nora would call lieux de mémoire, to evoke images and
concepts in his audience’s mind which are subsequently used to construct new explicitly Domitianic lieux de mémoire. As I argue, this process can take on four distinct forms or phases: conflict,
appropriation, obliterations, and construction. At the centre of my investigation are three case studies, three of the four imperial poems of the Silvae, each representing one particular type of lieu
de mémoire
: the monument, the memory landscape, and the ritual/festival. The first chapter discusses Silv. 1.1 on the Equus Domitiani, a new monument in the forum that competes with the old
monument and the respective memories that they represent. The second chapter deals with Silv. 4.3 on the new Domitian Highway. This new road activates memories in the Campanian countryside
which are then used by Statius to create a new Domitianic narrative. The last chapter deals with the imperial palace as described in Silv. 4.2. Here, the omnipresence of Domitian pushes out all other
memories, creating the new ritual of the Epulum Domitiani in the process.
Date of Award7 Dec 2018
Original languageEnglish
Awarding Institution
  • University of St Andrews
SupervisorEmma Buckley (Supervisor)

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  • 07 Oct 2026

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