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Conceptualizing Corruption in Ancient Athens and Rome

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Corruption is a process of degeneration activated or revealed by activities defined as illegal, immoral or deviant. Political corruption specifically defines forms of misbehavior damaging the comm...
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  • 14 May 2026
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Corruption is a process of degeneration activated or revealed by activities defined as illegal, immoral or deviant. Political corruption specifically defines forms of misbehavior damaging the community, as embezzlement; yet, it is impossible to disentangle from moral corruption, as the relationship between individual corruption and that of the entire community can take different forms in public opinion and discourse. The picture becomes even more blurred when considering corruption in ancient Athens and Rome. This is due to the scarcity and the general one-sidedness of ancient sources, as to modern narratives that tend to idealize those societies and to identify specific phases, such as the Late Republic or the Late Roman Empire, as moments of "decadence" and of widespread corruption.

The volume explores a variety of approaches to the study of corruption in ancient Athens and Rome, focusing on how corruption (and anti-corruption) were conceptualized, discussed and represented. Such analysis is relevant for today’s discussions about corruption, too, in particular by demonstrating how discourses of corruption interface with democratic ideology (as in Athens) and with electoral practices (as in Republican Rome).

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Price: $109.99
Pages: 350
Publisher: De Gruyter
Imprint: De Gruyter
Publication Date: 14 May 2026
ISBN: 9783111341521
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: LIT004190 LITERARY CRITICISM / Ancient & Classical, SOC003000 SOCIAL SCIENCE / Archaeology, Corruption in politics, government and society, Ancient history
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Filippo Carlà-Uhink and Marta García Morcillo, University of Potsdam, Germany; Shushma Malik, University of Cambridge, UK.