Shushma Malik

Teacher and PhD candidate

Email: sm3614

Research

My doctoral research is concerned with the reception of the first-century AD Roman emperor Nero as an eschatological adversary in Christian works of late antiquity and its subsequent revival in the nineteenth century. In late antiquity Nero was named as the First Beast in the Book of Revelation and the eschatological adversary in the Sibylline Oracles and apocryphal Ascension of Isaiah. This afforded Nero a pivotal role in the ultimate destruction of the earth, the apocalypse. I explore how and why Nero in particular was singled out for this role in emerging Christian historiography and exegesis, and argue that this phenomenon cannot be studied in isolation but must be examined alongside pagan interpretations of Nero’s reign. The tradition of Nero as the Antichrist was revived in the nineteenth century in the works of Ernest Renan and F.W. Farrar amongst others, and this reception is fundamental to how the emperor is conceived of and talked about even today. My thesis specifically focuses on re-contextualising the religious discussions concerning Nero back into their historical context of Nero as a Roman emperor, both in terms of the late antique tradition of Nero as the eschatological adversary and the nineteenth century reception of Nero as the Antichrist.

I have wider research interests in the history and historiography of Imperial Rome, religion and religious identity in late antiquity, and the Neronian influence on the Decadent Movement of the nineteenth century, particularly Oscar Wilde.

I am supervised by Dr Shelley Hales.

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