William A. Johnson is Associate Professor of Classical Studies, Duke University.
[An] outstanding study of ancient reading practices.... A nuanced history of reading practices in one well-defined era with a clear social and political backdrop. --James Ker, Classical Journal This is a book full of imaginative insights, and there is a lot here to encourage further thought about reading and writing (in fact, literacy), culture and its renewal among generations, and performance and identity. Not to sound like an imperial vir doctus, I recommend that we read and discuss this book. --American Journal of Philology J[ohnson]'s efforts to bring his expertise in material artifacts to bear on our understanding of ancient Roman's use of texts is wholly admirable. --Classical Philology Recommended. --CHOICE Readers and Reading Culture is an engaging work of cultural history. Johnson weighs evidence, allows for the idealizing or satirical slants of the texts and draws conclusions about real societies. -Gail Trimble, The Times Literary Supplement Overall, Johnson has produced a fascinating and useful study looking at not just the words authors have written, but what they are trying to produce through their writings. By looking at the readers as much as the writers (or at least the ideal reader the author is addressing), the author shines a light on how texts were read and appreciated in the high empire, and the importance of literary appreciation and a certain type of paideia for both authors and readers. -Francesca Sapsford, Rosetta