This book pursues a strand in the history of thought – ranging from codified statutes to looser social expectations – that uses particulars, more specifically examples, to produce norms. Much intellectual history takes ancient Greece as a point of departure. But the practice of exemplarity is historically rooted firmly in ancient Roman rhetoric, oratory, literature, and law – genres that also secured its transmission. Their pragmatic approach results in a conceptualization of politics, social organization, philosophy, and law that is derived from the concrete. It is commonly supposed that, with the shift from pre-modern to modern ways of thinking – as modern knowledge came to privilege abstraction over exempla, the general over the particular – exemplarity lost its way. This book reveals the limits of this understanding. Tracing the role of exemplarity from Rome through to its influence on the fields of literature, politics, philosophy, psychoanalysis and law, it shows how Roman exemplarity has subsisted, not only as a figure of thought, but also as an alternative way to organize and to transmit knowledge.
Chapter 2. Instance, example, case, and the relationship of the legal case to the law
Chapter 4. Equivalence unbalanced—metaphor, case, and example—from Aristotle to Derrida
Chapter 5. Without example: Adorno
Chapter 6. Roman exemplarity: mediating between general and particular
Chapter 7. Between unique and typical: Senecan exempla in a list
Chapter 8. Exemplum and Exceptio: building blocks for a rhetorical theory of the exceptional case
Chapter 9. Exemplum, analogy, and precedent in Roman law
Chapter 10. Machiavelli’s Agathocles: from criminal example to princely exemplum
Chapter 11. The exampleless example: of the infinite particulars of early modern common law
Chapter 12. Bacon’s bee: the physiognomy of the singular
Chapter 13. The temper of exemplarity: Werther’s horse
Chapter 14. Stendhal: Julien Sorel in the footsteps of Napoleon
Chapter 15. Beside oneself: parapraxis as a paradigm of everyday life (Freud)