Abstract
Abstract Although modern Republicanism, which highly values the right of freedom of speech, finds its inspiration in the historical reality of the Roman Republic, it seems that in the course of the Republican period citizens shared a recognised ability to speak freely in public, but did not enjoy equal status with one another in the domain of speech as protected by law. Of course, Republican Rome knew laws regulating free speech and perhaps even later provisions had been passed concerning iniuria. However, in these cases, as later on under Augustus, these measures acted as means of restraint and inhibition and did not directly address the right of the individual to speak freely. The fundamental question this paper addresses is why, in the course of the Republic, the right to speak freely was not protected by law and never came to be recognised as a formalised subjective right in Republican Rome. The answer, I argue, lies in the fact that in Rome speaking freely was conceived as the positive moral quality that characterised a natural ability of human beings, and thereby it could not have provided a field of legislation. It follows that the Roman Republic would not have passed the ‘straight talk test’ that modern Republicanism requires for the establishment of a free and just society. However, Republican Rome invites us to think about liberty of speech as belonging to the realm of ethics: as a moral quality sustained by contemporary social norms, not subject to legislation, which inevitably ends up protecting the interests of a group or groups and their specific speech regimes.
Highlights
The importance of liberty of speech appears to take centre stage in the current powerful revival of Neo-Republicanism as one of the fundamental basic liberties of our modern societies.[1]
The fundamental question this paper addresses is why, in the course of the Republic, the right to speak freely was not protected by law and never came to be recognised as a formalised subjective right in Republican Rome
It follows that the Roman Republic would not have passed the ‘straight talk test’ that modern Republicanism requires for the establishment of a free and just society
Summary
The importance of liberty of speech appears to take centre stage in the current powerful revival of Neo-Republicanism as one of the fundamental basic liberties of our modern societies.[1]. It is not a coincidence that, as Ineke Sluiter and Ralph Rosen point out, in Rome the phenomenon of veiled speech was thematised much more than the practical political aspects of free speech.[26] nowhere in the sources does the right of a Roman citizen to speak one’s mind appear to be legally protected. The considerably lowlier lot of the following individual does not permit me to deplore this at greater length.[32]
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More From: Polis: The Journal for Ancient Greek and Roman Political Thought
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