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Les sens du signe: l'herméneutique divinatoire dans l'historiographie latine d'époque impériale

Authors :
Romain Loriol
Source :
Études romanes de Brno, Vol 35, Iss 1 (2014)
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Masaryk University, 2014.

Abstract

Whoever deals with double-entendre in antic divination seems to refer exclusively to the topos of enigmatic oracular answers. But however famous, the oracular tradition represents only a small part of divination literature, and oracular ambiguity is only a particular instance of the use of polysemy in divination practice and discourse. By focusing on the interpretation and the pragmatics of interpretation in imperial Latin historiography – Suetonius especially, but also Quintus Curtius, Tacitus, and Ammianus – I want to highlight three things. First, that a sign is a compound of three distinct levels of meaning, which correspond to three distinct cognitive operations – description, identification, and interpretation. Second, that in the meantime, the abundance of analogical meanings is an obstacle to establish the genuine meaning of an omen. Third, that an interpreter nevertheless builds up a convincing interpretation precisely by handling numerous levels of meaning. From this point of view the exegesis of signs – whose very purpose is to decipher the future – is, under the appearance of learned, playful speculation, an actual rhetoric of power.

Details

Language :
Catalan; Valencian, Spanish; Castilian, French, Italian, Portuguese
ISSN :
18037399 and 23364416
Volume :
35
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Études romanes de Brno
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.6f0c960ee389436c818972b23a0878c5
Document Type :
article