While the relationship between fathers and sons, real or metaphorical, is still a dominant paradigm among classicists, this paper considers the rival contribution of Roman sons-in-law to the processes of collaboration and succession. It discusses the tensions, constraints, and obligations that soceri–generi relationships involved, then claims a significant role for sons-in-law in literary production. A new category is proposed here: “son-in-law literature,” with texts offered as recompense for a wife or her dowry, or as substitute funeral orations. Cicero and Tacitus are two authors for whom the relationship played a key role in shaping realities and fantasies of advancement. The idealized in-law bonds of De Amicitia, Brutus, and De Oratore are set against Cicero's intellectual aspirations and real-life dealings with a challenging son-in-law, while Tacitus' relationship to Agricola can be seen to affect both his historiographical discussions of father–son-in-law relationships and the lessons he drew from them about imperial succession.
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April 2019
Research Article|
April 01 2019
Knight's Moves: The Son-in-law in Cicero and Tacitus
Emily Gowers
Emily Gowers
St. John's College, Cambridge eg235@cam.ac.uk
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Classical Antiquity (2019) 38 (1): 2–35.
Citation
Emily Gowers; Knight's Moves: The Son-in-law in Cicero and Tacitus. Classical Antiquity 1 April 2019; 38 (1): 2–35. doi: https://doi.org/10.1525/ca.2019.38.1.2
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