A lively pocket history of the Roman Republic’s collapse—and its unsettling echoes in our own political moment.
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Americans are obsessed with Rome. Billionaires and manosphere pundits wax on about its military might, its gladiators, its emperors, its greatness.
But we’re telling ourselves the wrong story.
In this sharp, eye-opening account, classics professor Michelle Berenfeld redirects our gaze. The Roman Empire isn’t the lesson—the Roman Republic is. Nearly five centuries of representative government, undone by forces that should sound familiar: wealth and power concentrated in the hands of elites, rampant political violence, endless expansionist wars, and a Senate that normalized emergency measures until it had nothing left to protect. One by one, aspiring strongmen seized what the Senate had surrendered, stretching the limits of their legal power, using the military against their own people, undermining elections, and killing their enemies—until one of them, Augustus, gained total control and became an emperor.
Berenfeld’s argument is both clarifying and urgent: Rome’s slide into autocracy was not inevitable—and neither is ours. Smart, spirited, and packed with revelatory detail, Lessons from a Lost Republic is a wake-up call two thousand years in the making, a reminder that the republic is ours to protect.
PRODUCT DETAILS
ISBN: 9781966302223
Price: $30.00
On-sale date: 8/11/2026
Michelle Berenfeld is the John A. McCarthy Professor of Classics at Pitzer College. An archaeologist, she has conducted archeological digs at ancient sites in Greece, Egypt, Turkey, and Italy and is a fellow of the American Academy in Rome.