O imperialismo romano no mundo postcolonial

  1. Suárez Piñeiro, Ana María
Revista:
Semata: Ciencias sociais e humanidades

ISSN: 1137-9669 2255-5978

Ano de publicación: 2011

Título do exemplar: Imperios: luz y tinieblas

Número: 23

Páxinas: 115-130

Tipo: Artigo

Outras publicacións en: Semata: Ciencias sociais e humanidades

Resumo

Imperialism is a modern political concept, used to explain the expansion of the Roman Empire. The end of the European colonial empires, in the second half of the 20th century, changed the research on Roman imperialism and opened new perspectives of study. In fact, this issue has had an intense scholarly activity in the last 30 years

Referencias bibliográficas

  • Alston, “Conquest by text: Juvenal and Plutarch on Egypt”, en J. Webster & N. Cooper, eds., Roman Imperialism: Post-Colonial Perspectives, Leicester, 1996, p. 99-109.
  • Brunt, A. “Laus Imperii”, en P.D.A. Garnsey & C.R. Whittaker, eds., Imperialism in the Ancient World, Cambridge, 1978, p. 162-178, 183-191, 320-330.
  • Badian, E. Studies in Greek and Roman history, Oxford, 1964, referíndose á política romana en Iliria (p. 21).
  • Badian,E. Roman imperialism in the late Republic, Oxford, 1968, p. 9 ss
  • Bénabou, M. La résistance africaine à la romanisation, Paris, 1976.
  • Cary, M. A history of Roman down to the reign of Constantine, London, 1935, p. 145, explicando a motivación romana da I Guerra Púnica.
  • Champion, C. B. & Eckstein, A. M. en Champion, C. B., ed., Roman Imperialism. Readings and Sources, Oxford, 2004, p. 3
  • Clarke, Simon“Acculturation and continuity: re-assessing the significance of romanization in the hinterlands of Gloucester and Cirencester”, en J. Webster & N. Cooper, eds., Roman Imperialism: Post-Colonial Perspectives, Leicester, 1996, p. 71-84
  • Collins, R. “Identity in the Frontier: Theory and Multiple Community Interfacing”, en C. Fenwick, M. Wiggins, D. Wyhte, eds., Proceedings of the Seventeenth Annual Theoretical Roman Archaeology Conference London 2007, Oxford, 2008, p. 45-61
  • Cooper, N. J. “Searching for the blank generation: consumer choice in Roman and post-Roman Britain”, en J. Webster & N. Cooper, eds., Roman Imperialism: Pos Colonial Perspectives, Leicester, 1996, p. 85-98
  • Dommelen , P. van Beyond resistance: Roman power and local traditions in Punic Sardinia”, en P. van Dommelen e N. Terrenato, eds., Articulating Local Cultures: Power and Identity under the expanding Roman Republic, P. van Dommelen e N. Terrenato, eds., Portsmouth-Rode Island, 2007, p. 55-69
  • Dommelen. P. van e Terrenato, N. “Introduction: local cultures and the expanding Roman Republic”, en P. van Dommelen e N. Terrenato, eds., Articulating Local Cultures: Power and Identity under the expanding Roman Republic, Portsmouth-Rode Island, 2007, p. 7-12
  • Errington, R.M. The dawn of empire: Rome’s rise to world power, London, 1971.
  • Finley, M. I. “The fifth century Athenian Empire: a balance sheet”, en P.D.A. Garnsey e C.R. Whittaker, eds., Imperialism in the Ancient World, Cambridge, 1978, p. 103-126.
  • Frank, T. Roman Imperialism, New York, 1914 (versión electrónica: Batoche Books 2003)
  • Freeman, P. “‘Romanization’ and Roman material culture. Review of M. Millett’s The Romanization of Roman Britain. An essay in archaeologicalinterpretation. (Cambridge 1990)”. Journal of Roman Archaeology 6 (1993), p. 438-445
  • Gosden, C. “Postcolonial archaeology: Issues of Culture, identity, and Knowledge”, en I. Hodder, ed., Archaeological Theory Today, 2001, Cambridge, p. 241-261
  • Gruen, E. S. “Material Rewards and the Drive for Empire”, en W.V. Harris, ed., Imperialism of Mid-Republican Rome, Roma, 1984, p. 59-82.
  • Guerrero, V. M. Calvo, M., Salvà, B. nas Illas Baleares: “Insularity and the indigenous world on the periphery of the system: the Balearic Islands between the 6th and the 1st c. B.C.”, p. 71-84
  • Hanson, W. S. “Dealing with barbarians: the romanization of Britain”, en B. Vyner, ed., Building on the Past: papers celebrating 150 years of the Royal Archaeological Institute, London, 1994, p. 149-163.
  • Hanson, W. S. “Forces of change and methods of control”, en D.J. Mattingly, ed., Dialogues in Roman Imperialism, Rhode Island, 1997, p. 67-80.
  • Harris, W. V. “On War and Greed in the Second Century BC”, American Historical Review 76, nº2 (December 1971), p. 1371-85
  • Harris, W. V. War and Imperialism in Republican Rome, 327-70 BC, Oxford, 2000
  • Hingley, R. “The ‘legacy’ of Rome: the rise, decline, and fall of the theory of Romanization”, en Webster, J. & Cooper, N. eds., Roman Imperialism: Post-Colonial Perspectives, Leicester, 1996, p. 49-69
  • Hingley, R.(Globalizing Roman culture. Unity, diversity and empire, New York, 2005)
  • Holleaux, Maurice, Rome, la Grèce et les monarchies hellénistiques au IIIe s. av. J.-C. 273-205, Paris
  • Isaac, B. “Frontier Policy: Grand Strategy”, en The Limits of Empire: The Roman Army in the East, Oxford, 1990, p. 377-387
  • Jiménez Díez, A. Imagines Hibridae. Una aproximación postcolonialista al estudio de las necrópolis de la Bética, Madrid, 2008, p. 37 ss.
  • Jiménez Díez, A. Imagines Hibridae. Una aproximación postcolonialista al estudio de las necrópolis de la Bética, Madrid, 2008.
  • Jiménez, A. “A Critical Approach to the Concept of resistance: new ‘tradicitonal’ Rituals and Objects in Funerary Context of Roman Baetica”, Proceedings of the Seventeenth Annual Theoretical Roman Archaeology Conference London 2007, C. Fenwick, M. Wiggins, D. Wyhte, eds., Oxford, 2008, p. 15-30
  • Jones, G.D.B “From Brittunculi to Wounded Knee: a study in the development of ideas”, en D.J. Mattingly, ed., Dialogues in Roman Imperialism, Rhode Island, 1997, p. 185 ss.
  • Jones, R. “Cultural change in Roman Britain”, in R. Jones, ed., Roman Britain: recent trends, Sheffield, 1991, p. 115-120;
  • Luttwak,E. N. The Grand Strategy of the Roman Empire: from the first Century AD to the Third, Baltimore, 1976, p. 1-15.
  • MacMullen, R. Romanization in the Time of Augustus, Yale, 2000, p. 124-137; 174-177.
  • Mattern, S. Rome and the Enemy: Imperial Strategy in the Principate, Berkeley & Los Angeles, 1999, p. 194-210.
  • Mattingly, D. J. “From one colonialism to another: imperialism and the Maghreb”, en J. Webster & N. Cooper, eds., Roman Imperialism: Post-Colonial Perspectives, Leicester, 1996, p. 49-69
  • Mattingly, D. J. Imperialism, Power, and Identity, Princeton, 2011,
  • Millett, M. The Romanization of Britain: An essay in archaeological interpretation. Cambridge, 1990;
  • Noelke, P. ed., Romanisation und Resistenz in Plastik, Architektur und Inschriften der Provinzen des Imperium Romanum. Neue Funde und Forschungen, Köln, 2003
  • Nutton, V. “The beneficial ideology” en P.D.A. Garnsey & C.R. Wittaker, eds., Imperialism in the Ancient World, Cambridge, 1978 (2006).
  • Perelli, L. Imperialismo, capitalismo e rivoluzione culturale nella prima metà del II secolo a.C., I, Torino, 1975, p. 130-153.
  • Revell, L. Roman Imperialims and local Identities, Cambridge, 2009.
  • Rich, J. “Fear, Greed, and Glory: The Causes of Roman War Making in the Middle Republic”, en J. Rich & Graham Shipley, eds., War and Society in the Roman World, London, 1995, p. 38-68.
  • Richardson, “Empire and the Language of Power”, Journal of Roman Studies 81 (1991)
  • Schumpeter, J. A. Imperialism and Social Classes, New York, 1951.
  • Slofstra , “An anthropolical approach to the study of Romanization processes”, en R. Brandt e J. Slofstra, eds.,Roman and Native in the Low Countries. Spheres of interaction, Oxford, 1983, p. 71-104
  • Souza, P. de “They are the enemies of all mankind: justifying Roman imperialism in the Late Republic”, en J. Webster & N. Cooper, eds., Roman Imperialism. Post-Colonial Perspectives, Leicester, 1996, p. 125-133.
  • Sterry, M. “Searching for Identity in Italian Landscapes”, en C. Fenwick, M. Wiggins, D. Wyhte, eds., Proceedings of the Seventeenth Annual Theoretical Roman Archaeology Conference London 2007, Oxford, 2008, p. 31-43
  • Stone, D. L. “Burial, identity and local cultures in North Africa”, en P. van Dommelen e N. Terrenato, eds., Articulating Local Cultures: Power and Identity under the expanding Roman Republic, Portsmouth-Rode Island, 2007, p. 127-144
  • Stone, D. L. no norte de África: “Burial, identity and local cultures in North Africa”, p. 127-144
  • Suárez Piñeiro. A. A romanización en Galicia, Santiago de Compostela, 2009, p. 109-111.
  • Toner, Jerry, Rethinking Roman History, Cambridge, 2002,
  • Veyne, P. “Y a-t-il eu un imperialisme romain?”, Mélanges de l École Française de Rome 87 (1975), p.793-855.
  • Vives-Fernández, J. Negociando encuentros. Situaciones coloniales e intercambios en la costa oriental de la Península Ibérica (ss. VIII-VI a. C.), Barcelona, 2005.
  • Webster, J. “Roman imperialism and the ‘post imperial age’”, en J. Webster & N. Cooper, eds., Roman Imperialism. Post-Colonial Perspectives, Leicester, 1996,
  • Webster, J. ”Ethnographic barbarity: colonial discorse and ‘Celtic warrior societies’”, en J. Webster & N. Cooper, eds., Roman Imperialism. Post-Colonial Perspectives, Leicester, 1996, p. 111-123
  • Woolf, G. “World Systems Analysis and the Roman Empire”, Journal of Roman Archaeology 3 (1990), p. 44-58.
  • Woolf, G. Becoming Roman: The Origins of Provincial Civilization in Gaul, Cambridge, 1998, p. 238-249
  • Woolf, G. The unity and diversity of Romanization”, Journal of Roman Archaeology 5 (1992), pp. 349-352;