Rhetorical Action in Ancient Athens: Persuasive Artistry from Solon to DemosthenesSIU Press, 2006 - 249 من الصفحات James Fredal’s wide-ranging survey examines the spatial and performative features of rhetorical artistry in ancient Athens from Solon to Demosthenes, demonstrating how persuasive skill depended not on written treatises, but on the reproduction of spaces and modes for masculine self-formation and displays of contests of character.
Studies of the history of rhetoric generally begin with Homer and Greek orality, then move on to fifth-century Sicily and the innovations of Corax, Tisias, and the older Sophists. While thorough and useful, these narratives privilege texts as the sole locus of proper rhetorical knowledge. Rhetorical Action in Ancient Greece: Persuasive Artistry from Solon to Demosthenes describes rhetoric as largely unwritten and rhetorical skill as closely associated with the ideologies and practices of gender formation and expression. In expanding the notion of rhetorical innovation to include mass movements, large social genres, and cultural practices—rather than the formulations of of individual thinkers and writers—Fredal offers a view of classical rhetoric as local and contingent, bound to the physical spaces, local histories, and cultural traditions of place.
Fredal argues that Greek rhetorical skill remained a function of local spaces like the Pnyx, social practices such as symposia or local meetings, cultural ideologies like those surrounding masculine friendship, and genres of performance such as how to act like a man, herald, sage, tyrant, or democrat. Citizen participation, he explains, was motivated by the desire to display masculine excellence in contests of character by overcoming fear and exerting symbolic and bodily control over self, situation, and audience. He shows how ancient Greek rhetoric employed patterns of “action” such as public oratory and performance to establish, reinforce, or challenge hierarchies and claims to political power.
Instead of examining speeches, handbooks, and theory, Rhetorical Action in Ancient Greece examines the origins of rhetoric in terms of performance. The result is a presentation of rhetorical knowledge as embodied in places and practices with spatial and practical logics that are rarely articulated in written discourse. The volume calls on archaeological, literary, and anthropological evidence about the rhetorical actions of Athens’s leading political agents—including Solon, Peisistratus, Cleisthenes, Demosthenes, and the anonymous “herm-choppers” of the Peloponnesian war—to demonstrate how each generation of political leaders adopted and transformed existing performance genres and spaces to address their own political exigency.
|
من داخل الكتاب
النتائج 1-5 من 75
... Speeches , addresses , etc. , Greek — History and criticism . 2. Athens ( Greece ) -Civilization . 3. Persuasion ( Rhetoric ) . 4. Rhetoric , Ancient . 5. Oratory , Ancient . I. Title . PA3265.F74 2006 885'.0109 - dc22 ISBN - 10 : 0 ...
... speech of Demosthenes to the metopes on the frieze of the Parthenon . Rhetorical performance also requires a form of tacit and practical knowledge passed from body to body not unlike that of a mason , knowledge that remains , in ...
... theoretical treatises or even written speeches precisely because it provided the practical foundation upon which these texts depended and that they took for granted . Of course , even from the best vantage points , INTRODUCTION 5.
... speeches and au- thors , of textual genres and canons , of praise and blame , innocence and guilt , expedience and folly , future and past , and all those commonplaces frequented by scholars and historians whose medium is exhausted by ...
... speech writers but with the local political agents , public spaces , and events— individual and collective — whose actions shaped Athenian rhetorical cul- ture . Unlike the sanctioned and authorized rhetoric envisioned by rhetori- cal ...
المحتوى
Rhetorical Performance and the Contest for Fame | 15 |
Seeing Rhetorical Means | 182 |
Notes | 205 |
Works Cited | 225 |
Index | 239 |