Description |
xiii, 668 pages : illustrations ; 21 cm |
Contents |
I. The Urge to be Unique. Above It All: Lindbergh and Hemingway. The Longing of Alexander -- II. The Destiny of Rome. Public Men and the Fall of the Roman Republic. The Authority of Augustus -- III. The Emptiness of Public Fame. The Uneasy Truce: Authority and Authorship. Christianity and the Fame of the Spirit -- IV. The Intercession of Art. The Imagery of Invisible Power. The Intermediary and His Audience. Printing and Portraiture: The Dissemination of the Unique -- V. The Democratization of Fame. From Monarchs to Individualists. The Posture of Reticence and the Sanction of Neglect. Democratic Theater and the Natural Performer -- Conclusion: The Dream of Acceptability -- Afterword to the Vintage Edition: Fame Without History |
Notes |
Originally published: New York : Oxford University Press, 1986 |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 619-643) and index |
Subject |
Fame -- Social aspects.
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Fame.
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LC no. |
97005434 |
ISBN |
0679776303 |
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