“Melanie Racette-Campbell provides deft analysis and brilliant close readings about how the Augustan poets mobilized their understanding of Roman masculinity in response to life in the new regime. Highly recommended for anyone interested in ancient Roman sexuality and gender or the intersection of political history and gendered norms.”—Charles Goldberg, Bethel University
“A welcome addition to our developing awareness of how masculinity was constructed, challenged, reconsidered, and performed by the literary elite in the Late Republic and early Principate. . . . A study that is both expansive and tightly controlled, with fresh readings of early imperial poetry that avoid claiming too much. . . . Racette-Campbell’s translations and assessments feel innovative and germane.”—Bryn Mawr Classical Review