Seeing Ancient Rhetoric, Easily at a Glance

James Fredal The Ohio State University

Abstract

ABSTRACT Though many sophists were interested in the nature and power of logos, there were strong reasons for them not to set up as teachers of the art of verbal manipulation. Whatever Aristophanes and Plato may imply, sophists would have been foolish to advertise a persuasive skill divorced from knowledge and moral authority. “Sophists without Rhetoric” Andrew Ford The aim of this chapter is to examine a particular rhetoric of socialization which has in the latter part of the twentieth century fallen from view despite its significance in Hellenic antiquity, that of Athenian law. “Legal Instruction in Classical Athens” Yun Lee Too This paper suggests a view of ancient Greek rhetoric that embraces multiple media and that emphasizes rhetorical interaction as a form of cultural reproduction through visual and spatial means, and it illustrates the importance of these elements with reference to the ancient Athenian assembly place, the Pnyx and the Greek concept of eusynoptos .

Journal
Rhetoric Society Quarterly
Published
2006-07-01
DOI
10.1080/02773940600605537
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Citation Context

Cited by in this index (2)

  1. Rhetoric Society Quarterly
  2. Rhetoric Review

References (15)

  1. Athenian Constitution
  2. Politics
  3. The Imaginary Institution of Society
  4. Cleisthenes the Athenian
  5. The Origins of Rhetoric in Ancient Greece
Show all 15 →
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  9. Greek Roman and Byzantine Studies
  10. Education in Greek and Roman Antiquity