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Rating: Summary: Excellence with a Grain of Salt Review: I found Kahn's book fascinating, although I agree with an earlier reviewer that I regret he could not keep his personal politics more out of his book - irritating, but a small caveat when there is so much of use here. It's as if Kahn is too prone to project Rome in 60 BC onto the U.S. in, say, 1935. I've read many books on Caesar (including C. Meier's rather romantic German version) and in many ways, I enjoyed Kahn's more than any except Gelzer (who is still the best). Kahn has his finger on almost every significant event in Caesar's (and the late Republic's) life and is able to work through the facts both thoroughly and logically. In fact, the book is almost overwhelming in its detail. Agreed, he is one of the "pro-Caesar" faction - which seems almost by definition to mean, he's anti-Optimate. Well, it's the rare historian of Caesar who can manage not to take sides on this subject, the very issue that tore the Republic apart. Read the book with the realization that you have a fine bio of Caesar here, accurate and thorough, but more than slightly prejudiced against the Roman Senate that so thoroughly detested and tried to destroy Caesar and you will do very well.
Rating: Summary: Excellent discussion on the great man's life Review: I was attracted by the title. Caesar's education is his actual experienc in dealing with people. He was brilliant and would have done a lot for Rome. He "could read without moving his lips!" Contrary to Shakespeare he refused the crown. He was killed because he was about to redistribute the land. In capitalist societies sooner or later the most aggressive own all the land/wealth. It happened in Athens and Sparta. The Israelites established the Jubilee to compensate for this. At that time all debts were cancelled and land returned to former owners and slaves set free. I found this much more interesting and exciting than Thucydides!
Rating: Summary: Author's political biases are projected onto the pasrt Review: What's wrong with the Education of Julius Caesar? In a word, Arthur Kahn can't seem to keep his Leftist political biases from coloring his evaluation of the Late Republic. His prejudices seep in on virutally every page in which the Senate is discussed. This is not to say that the Senators where saints; far from it. But they were men of their time, who had been raised in a political community that indoctrinated them into it's beliefs just as every other society does. Kahn seems to ignore this in his zeal to paint the "oligarchs", as he calls them, in a bad light. This is illegitimate, as anyone who understands the structure of the Roman state in that era must know. The Romans had a nomialist theory of the state. Rather than thinking that Rome as a poltical community was some kind of larger whole, over and above it's citizens, the Romans believed that Rome was nothing but the assembly of the Roman people as private persons. This is the reason they based citizenship and voting rights on wealth. Since they did not have a very sharp and differentiated notion of political as opposed to private life, they could not find a basis for evaluating one apart from the other. Thus, a rich man was literally more of a citizen than a poor one, because he had more of the Republic than the poor man did, due to his extensive property. We regard this as bizarre, but no one in Rome seems to have thought twice about it. A result of this identification of the personal and the political is the radical fusion of the personal interests of the rulers with those of the state. That is why the Senators reacted so violently to reform attempts - they knew no vision of politics that would enable them to see any degradation of their posiiton as anything other than an attack of Roman society itself. They simply could not differentiate their own positions of power from the State. This is what Kahn ignores. In page after page, he portrays the Senate as a gang of cynical, ruthless misers out to strip everyone else to the bone while hiding their crimes under the name of patriotism. In truth, these sad little men just didn't know any better. Kahn ignores this, and thus projects his own class-warfare ridden politics onto men who lived two millenia ago.If you want a good biography of Caesar, try Christian Meier's "Caesar", availble at Amazon.com, instead.
Rating: Summary: Who's the baboon? Review: Why would anyone write a biography of a historic figure and use a cartoon of a baboon on the cover? Can that be the face of the author? I doubt that the greatest general and statesman of ancient times looked like a baboon. More likely it's a leftist biographer. Don Norton
Rating: Summary: Who's the baboon? Review: Why would anyone write a biography of a historic figure and use a cartoon of a baboon on the cover? Can that be the face of the author? I doubt that the greatest general and statesman of ancient times looked like a baboon. More likely it's a leftist biographer. Don Norton
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