dc.description.abstract | This thesis investigates the representation—and conspicuous absence—of psychological
combat trauma in ancient Roman literature. While Greek sources occasionally acknowledge
the mental toll of warfare, Roman texts appear largely silent on the subject, even in genres
where one might reasonably expect its presence, such as military treatises and epic poetry.
This literary analysis examines a range of Roman authors, including Caesar, Vergil, and Am
mianus Marcellinus, to explore what their works reveal about Roman societal attitudes to
ward psychological trauma resulting from combat. The study’s central argument is that the
scarcity of explicit references to such trauma is itself a meaningful phenomenon, reflecting
cultural values and ideological constructs rather than a lack of psychological impact. The the
sis concludes with a threefold observation: first, that references to combat trauma are notably
rare; second, that this absence is striking given the nature of the sources; and third, that this
silence points to a deliberate cultural suppression or reframing of psychological vulnerability
within Roman martial discourse. Ultimately, the project asks what ancient literary sources
can—and cannot—tell us about the awareness and articulation of combat-related trauma in
Roman society. | |