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Tag Archives: Depression
War, Combat Trauma, and Poetry: Evidence for PTSD in the Latin Verse Inscriptions?
In my previous blog post, I introduced a text that provides an (albeit anecdotal) unusual view on the Roman army, its drill, its effectiveness, and the dehumanising, romanticising narratives that prevail around it. The further one delves into the world … Continue reading
Fruit of the Doom: an Image of Life, Death, and Letting Go in Roman Poetry
Death has been on my mind lately, having recently learnt of the untimely passing of two of my colleagues at the University of Reading. Whether death was imminent or came suddenly, whether it hits the old or the young – … Continue reading
Sadness, Weariness, and Laughter: An Ancient Latin Poem on Occasion of Mental Health Awareness Week 2015
Between 11-17 May 2015 it is Mental Health Awareness Week, when the Mental Health Foundation, like every year, helps to raise awareness of mental health and wellbeing issues. Mental health is hard to define. On their webpages, the Mental Health … Continue reading
Buried Above Ground
The idea that the body is a prison-house or, more drastically still, a tomb of the soul – often shortened to the phrase soma sema – is an ancient one. Rooted in Orphic (rather than Pythagorean) thought, it finds its first … Continue reading
Posted in Carmina Epigraphica, Epigraphy, Poetry
Tagged Afterlife, Big questions, Carmina Latina Epigraphica, Death, Depression, Early Christianity, Imagery, Mental health, Suicide
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