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Carregando... Circus Factions (1976)de Alan Cameron
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"Conceived as a companion volume to Porphyrius the Charioteer, this study traces the history and significance of what are generally known as 'circus factions' from the principate of Augustus to the eve of the Crusades, dealing mainly with the late Roman to early Byzantine periods. Other historians have analysed the activities of the factions, particularly the urban riots, in social, political, and religious terms, ignoring their sporting allegiances. Cameron offers a thorough-going criticism of the 'traditional' presupposition 'that racing was a thin fac?ade for social and religious conflict'. In its place he presents what is essentially the history of chariot racing, its organization, participants, and spectator supporters. He shows how circus entertainments developed from privately mounted games to publicly funded entertainments; he examines the role of the hippodrome and theatre within political life; and he studies the changing nature of factions--from sporting rivalry, through 'partisan' gangs and hooliganism, to their incorporation in the games' imperial ceremonial and consequent decline." -- Provided by publisher Não foram encontradas descrições de bibliotecas. |
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In Cameron's telling, the factions - the "circus" part of their usual designation is a bit of a misnomer as in Byzantium they became involved also with the theatre - were numerically small associations of hooliganistically inclined sports fans that acquired a role in imperial ceremonial. In what he calls the traditional view, they were ascribed much greater importance as divisions of the whole of urban society with a variety of political, religious, and military functions alongside their role at the circus and theatre.