Jula Wildberger

The American University of Paris
  • Teaching Classics through Art: Visual Arts as a Tool for Enhancing Text Comprehension and Appreciation
    with Jonathan Shimony
    In Kristof Nyiri & Andras Benedek (eds.), The Iconic Turn in Education, Peter Lang. pp. 25-37. 2012.
    Showcases methods of visualization to support text comprehension and engagement with texts. Includes examples from teaching Plato's Phaedo.
  •  567
    This paper is a first publication on my ongoing research on the sources of the extant doxographies on Stoic ethics. It argues that there are identifiable traces of a copy-and-paste strategy in the “Outline of Stoic Ethics” generally attributed to Arius Didymus and transmitted in Johannes Stobaeus’ Anthology. The author of the Outline took extant doxographic texts and supplemented it by inserting additional material. The editing process also resulted in transpositions, omissions, and rewriting to…Read more
  • Close reading of the argumentative and logical structure of Diatribe 1.4 and the means of protreptic persuasion used in it. The paper argues that Arrian represents Epictetus as using deliberately bad arguments to showcase and exemplify the audience's muddled thinking.
  •  791
    Delimiting a Self by God in Epictetus
    In Jörg Rüpke & Greg Woolf (eds.), Religious Dimensions of the Self in the Second Century CE, Mohr Siebeck. pp. 23-45. 2013.
    Epictetus' thought is defined by an antithesis of mine and not-mine, which is an antithesis of externals and self. From this arise a number of questions for Epictetus‘ theology, which are addressed in this paper: How is the self delimited from God, given that God is all-pervading? Is God inside or outside the self? In which way is God the cause, creator and shaper of the self? And how does human agency and self-shaping through prohairesis spell out within this determinst framework? If, as will b…Read more
  •  87
    Stertinian Rhetoric: Pre-Imperial Stoic Theory and Practice of Public Discourse
    In Christos Kremmydas & Kathryn Tempest (eds.), Hellenistic Oratory: Continuity and Change, Oxford University Press. pp. 249-276. 2013.
    According to an ancient stereotype, prominent in Cicero’s writings, Stoics hated rhetoric and were really bad it. But Horaces’ Satires are populated with lecturing Stoics using colorful, effusive language to cure their audience. The paper asks how “rhetorical” Stoics really were and argues that there was a continued tradition of Stoic rhetoric linking the diatribic speech of the Imperial period to its Hellenistic practitioners. It surveys the evidence for Stoic orators and rhetorical writers in …Read more
  •  42
    The Epicurus Trope and the Construction of a ‘Letter Writer’ in Senecas Epistulae Morales
    In Jula Wildberger & Marcia L. Colish (eds.), Seneca Philosophus, De Gruyter. pp. 431-465. 2014.
    The engagement with Epicurus in the Epistulae morales is a multifaceted literary device essential to the fabric of that epistolary Bildungsroman. It characterizes a Letter Writer “Seneca” and contributes to the dramatic structure of the Epistulae morales as an introduction not just to Stoicism, but to philosophy itself. The Letter Writer develops into a serious philosopher and progresses from naïve endorsement to a more sophisticated account of Stoic thought. He draws increasingly sharper distin…Read more
  •  742
    Considers the paradox of demonstrative retreat from public life, as illustrated by scenes like Sen. Ep. 78.20f. and Epict. 3.22.23 with ailing philosophers almost scurrilously eager to display their heroism. Why would a philosopher want to withdraw and, at the same time, make a show of his withdrawal? How can this kind of exemplarity fulfill its therapeutic function? And how is this kind of communication, with one’s back turned to the audience, as it were, supposed to work? Tacitus’ narrative of…Read more
  •  834
    Argues that Tacitus’ shaped his account of Seneca and the characterization of Nero within his social environment according to features characteristic of Seneca’s conception of friendship. Surprisingly, Tacitus assigns to Nero an active power: The emperor drives a ubiquitous inversion of the social values promoted by his mentor. Patterns of Seneca’s social thought are adduced to characterize not only the portrayed emperor but also the political institution itself.
  •  58
    Seneca
    Oxford Bibliographies in Philosophy. 2015.
    Bibliography focusing on L. Annaeus Seneca as a philosopher. Sorry about the image, which, of course, doesn't depict Seneca. We didn't select it.
  •  1091
    Mucius Scaevola and the Essence of Manly Patientia
    Antiquorum Philosophia 9 27-39. 2015.
    Patientia, the virtue of enduring physiological pain, poses a problem for Roman elite masculinities. The male body is supposed to be unpenetrated, but when pain is inflicted the body is often cut and pierced. This paper looks at literary and philosophical representations of the moral exemplar Mucius Scaevola to see how Roman writers and philosophers deal with this dilemma.
  • Poseidonios
    Reallexikon Für Antike Und Christentum 28 24-37. 2016.
    Lexicon article on Posidonius, with particular emphasis on Posidonius' reception in Christian thought.
  •  724
    Types of Freedom and Submission in Tacitus' Agricola
    In Aldo Setaioli (ed.), Apis Matina: Studi in onore di Carlo Santini, Eut Edizioni Università Di Trieste. pp. 715-726. 2016.
    Discusses conceptions of freedom displayed in Tacitus' Agricola. Tacitus seems to have had a clear-cut conceptual grid in which the German defectors, the Usipi, mirror the futile demonstrations of freedom by senators seeking a "ambitious death." The British provincials, including Calgacus and his followers, correspond to the ordinary Roman people and their leadership. It is in the army that a form of non-debasing hierarchy for the common benefit can be conceived, as long as the army and their le…Read more
  •  1
    Antinomien des alternden Selbst
    In Angelika C. Messner, Andreas Bihrer & Harm-Peer Zimmermann (eds.), Alter und Selbstbeschränkung: Beiträge aus der Historischen Anthropologie, Böhlau Verlag Wien. pp. 187-200. 2017.
    Perspectives on old age are characterized by an antinomy of veneration and contempt. This paper explores how this antinomy is spelled in philosophical discourses and how it intersects with the antithesis of fool and sage. According to a Platonist or Antiochean account of ontogenesis, an individual’s development is conceived as an approximate instantiation of an ideal form of “man,” which tends to divide old people into successes and failures. In contrast to this, the Stoic theory of oikeiōsis en…Read more
  •  2
    Analyzes Seneca's conception of friendship as an innovative adaptation of Stoic eros to accommodate Roman social norms of equality and reciprocity and to define a form of non-defective friendship for fools who are making progess. Also provides a new answer to the conundrum of "will" in Seneca by connecting it to the impulse types epibole ("effort," also the impulse type of eros) and prothesis attested in Greek Stoic sources, and shows the connection between progessor friendship as an effort to …Read more
  •  773
    This paper interprets the demonstrative retreat from public life and the promotion of self-improvement in Seneca’s later works as a political undertaking. Developing arguments by THOMAS HABINEK, MATTHEW ROLLER and HARRY HINE, it suggests that Seneca promoted the political vision of a cosmic community of progressors toward virtue constituted by a special form of progressor friendship, a theoretical innovation made in the Epistulae morales. This network of like-minded individuals spanning time and…Read more
  • Bilingual edition with ancient Greek text and German translation, rather lavish notes explaining all the philosophy jokes and introduction that also outlines the nature of Lukian's engagement with his famous subtext, Plato's Symposium.
  •  1407
    Demonstrates the sophistication of Seneca’s Stoicism by setting his contributions within the context of his school. Seneca’s contributions to physics, metaphysics, logic, determinism, theodicy and eschatology are set within a systematic reconstructions of Stoic positions. Ample documentation of sources and scholarship as well as the thematic, handbook-like structure allow for this book to be used as a look-up tool and introduction to the Stoic cosmos and the place of humans within it. There are…Read more
  •  1
    Bilingual edition with German translation, introduction, and notes.
  •  1295
    How did the Stoics conceive of a polis and statehood? What happens when these ideas meet different biographies and changing historical environments? To answer these questions, 'The Stoics and the State' combines close philological reading of original source texts and fine-grained conceptual analysis with wide-ranging contextualisation, which is both thematic and diachronic. A systematic account elucidates extant definitions, aspects of statehood (territory, institutions, population and state obj…Read more
  •  52
    Explores the narrative style characterizing Lucian's busibody persona Lycinus.