von Adrian Franklin
10,99 €
Prolog"...some are marked out for subjection¿he, who is by nature not his own but another's man, is by nature a slave; and he may be said to be another's man who, being a human being, is also a possession."Aristotle, Politics, 1254b1-21.Year 73 B.C.Nothing indicates to an insurrection when a small group of gladiators manages to escape the school in Capua. Rapidly it comes to a conflagration that spreads across the whole country.Under the leadership of the Thracian Spartacus, they defeated the roman armies, victorious all over the world, time and time again. For almost three years, they mastered the italian peninsula and the centre of the then world power, Rome.Spartacus, a Thracian, not really tangible from the mists of history, because compared to Hannibal or Alexander, there are hardly any written records about him.Hannibal is, above all, the battle of Cannae. Spartacus has no (written down) battle that overshadows others, no crossing of the Alps, instead a series of clichés.This novel attempts to portray the uprising as, - the attempt of the impossible.The film Blade-Runner (despite a completely different genre) has been a blueprint for the form of making the impossible, subtly, visible. There is no similarity to the plot, or the characters, it is the form/idea of depicting the impossibility of an undertaking.