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The Roman Hannibal: Remembering The Enemy In Si... -

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For those looking to read the epic itself, a modern English translation of all 17 books by Antony Augoustakis and Neil W. Bernstein is available at Routledge . Remembering the Enemy in Silius Italicus' 'Punica'

The poem often enters Hannibal's perspective, showing him as a man striving to build an eternal legacy.

Stocks shows how Silius constructs Hannibal using literary models like Homerโ€™s Achilles and Virgilโ€™s Aeneas.

Siliusโ€™s portrayal is seen as the final evolution of centuries of Roman engagement with Hannibal in literature.

Other researchers, such as those published in the Journal of Ancient History and Social Sciences , highlight how Hannibal evokes the "tragic tyrants" of Seneca through his destructive emotions, such as ira (anger) and furor (fury).

This work is part of a modern scholarly "revival" of Silius Italicus, whose 17-book epic Punica is the longest surviving Latin poem. Core Argument: Hannibal as an Icon of Romanitas

A central "interesting paper" (or more precisely, a seminal book often discussed in academic circles) on this exact topic is by Claire Stocks (2014).

Stocks argues that Siliusโ€™s Hannibal is not just a foreign villain, but a "Romanized" figure who paradoxically exemplifies (Roman-ness).

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