New Books in Ancient History

Cam Grey, "Living with Risk in the Late Roman World" (U Pennsylvania Press, 2025)


Listen Later

Living With Risk in the Late Roman World (U Pennsylvania Press, 2025)explores the ever-present experiences of risk that characterized the daily existence of individuals, communities, and societies in the late Roman world (late third century CE through mid-sixth century CE). Recognizing the vital role of human agency, author Cam Grey bases his argument on the concept of the riskscape: the collection of risks that constitute everyday lived experience, the human perception of those risks, and the actions that exploit, mitigate, or exacerbate them. In contrast to recent grand narratives of the fate of the late Roman Empire, Living with Risk in the Late Roman World focuses on the quotidian practices of mitigation and management, foreknowledge and prediction, and mobilization and manipulation of risks at the individual and community levels.

Grey illustrates the ubiquity of these practices through a collection of anecdotes that emphasize the highly localized, heterogeneous, and complementary nature of riskscapes: members of local communities enlisting figures of power to neutralize the hazards posed by imminent catastrophes, be it a tsunami, earthquake, or volcanic eruption; Christian holy figures both suffering and imposing bodily affliction as part of their claims to control such hazards and thereby to exercise influence in these communities; intimate experiences of seasonality and weather that shaped local practices of subsistence but also of self-representation; and geographically specific and fiercely contested claims to special knowledge and control of water.

Multidisciplinary in its methodology and provocative in its argumentation, Living with Risk in the Late Roman World demonstrates that human communities in the ancient past were inextricably intertwined with the world around them, and that the actions they took simultaneously responded to and shaped the risks—both hazardous and favorable—that they perceived.

New Books in Late Antiquity is presented by Ancient Jew Review

Cam Grey is Professor of Classics at the University of Pennsylvania

Michael Motia teaches in Classics and Religious Studies at UMass Boston

Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

New Books in Ancient HistoryBy New Books Network

  • 4.3
  • 4.3
  • 4.3
  • 4.3
  • 4.3

4.3

16 ratings


More shows like New Books in Ancient History

View all
The LRB Podcast by The London Review of Books

The LRB Podcast

289 Listeners

In Our Time by BBC Radio 4

In Our Time

5,433 Listeners

History Extra podcast by Immediate Media

History Extra podcast

3,202 Listeners

The Ancient World by Scott C.

The Ancient World

1,837 Listeners

The History of Egypt by Dominic Perry

The History of Egypt

1,853 Listeners

Literature and History by Doug Metzger

Literature and History

1,406 Listeners

Ancient Greece Declassified by Dr. Lantern Jack

Ancient Greece Declassified

498 Listeners

Tides of History by Wondery /  Patrick Wyman

Tides of History

6,293 Listeners

The Hellenistic Age Podcast by The Hellenistic Age Podcast

The Hellenistic Age Podcast

455 Listeners

The Ancients by History Hit

The Ancients

3,203 Listeners

The Rest Is History by Goalhanger

The Rest Is History

14,431 Listeners

Anglo-Saxon England by Evergreen Podcasts

Anglo-Saxon England

219 Listeners

Misquoting Jesus with Bart Ehrman by Bart Ehrman

Misquoting Jesus with Bart Ehrman

647 Listeners

Biblical Time Machine by Helen Bond & Lloyd Llewellyn-Jones

Biblical Time Machine

212 Listeners

The Ancients by History Hit

The Ancients

20 Listeners