Virgil and the first patron between politics and poetry: Pascale Roze
Pascale Roze's novel "Le roman de Mécène" (2025) explores antiquity as a living source, the role of art in society, and the complex personality of Mécène. The text deliberately breaks with conventional narrative structures, interweaving scholarship with personal reflection to paint a picture of patronage and its era. As a friend of Emperor Augustus and a patron of poets such as Virgil, Horace, and Propertius, Mécenas gave his name to the art of patronage. He is portrayed as a complex character: an Etruscan knight, poet, and dandy, yet also a man plagued by anxieties, living in a time of violent upheaval and still harboring a love of art and a yearning for peace.
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