Roman Culture
Spartacus
The 1960 film Spartacus claims to tell the story of the famous slave revolt, also known as the Gladiator War, which terrorized Rome for years and can be pinpointed as one of the most influential causes of the eventual destruction of the Roman Republic and its descent into imperialism and tyranny. One must say "claims to be," rather than "is," in this case because the film is wildly inaccurate historically. The creators of this work were, of course, aware of its lack of historical authenticity, which is partly attributed to the artistic necessity of condensing four years of political upheaval and constant warfare into less than four hours. Indeed, condensation of time is the biggest historical inaccuracy here -- for example, many main Roman characters are rather indiscriminately condensed in time, such as Gracchus who appears to be a combination of two Gracchus brothers active fifty years before Spartacus, or the condensation of Crassus with Sulla as a military tyrant. Among these many historical inaccuracies is a serious distortion of the facts regarding slavery in the Roman Republic. This distortion is not so much made explicit as it is subtly portrayed through-out the film. The bare realities of slave demographics and culture are obscured, the slave revolutionaries are simultaneously idealized and made less effective warriors than they were historically, and Spartacus as an individual suffers the same fate.
The obfuscation of slave life is subtle but pervasive, in that slavery in Rome is frequently made to appear more like American slavery than is quite accurate. There are several ways in which this happens -- first, in this film the source of slaves appears to be mainly through natural reproduction and occasionally the kidnapping or enslaving of free...
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